Monday, October 9, 2023

Kothapaluku: మోదీ తప్పుటడుగు...!

 Kothapaluku: మోదీ తప్పుటడుగు...!

ABN , First Publish Date - 2023-10-08T01:03:59+05:30 IST



Kothapaluku: మోదీ తప్పుటడుగు...!

శకునం చెప్పే బల్లి కుడితిలో పడిందట! మూడు రోజుల క్రితం నిజామాబాద్‌లో ప్రధాని నరేంద్ర మోదీ ప్రసంగం విన్న వారికి ఈ సామెత గుర్తుకు రావడం సహజం. తన వాక్చాతుర్యం, హావభావాలు, ఎత్తుగడలతో దేశ రాజకీయాల్లో తనకు సమ ఉజ్జీ లేరన్న అభిప్రాయాన్ని ఇన్నాళ్లుగా ప్రధాని మోదీ దేశ ప్రజలలో కలిగించారు. మోదీ భక్తులు నమో నామస్మరణలో తరించేవారు. అలాంటి మోదీ నిజామాబాద్‌ సభలో మాత్రం పప్పులో కాలేశారు. నోరు జారారు. గ్రేటర్‌ హైదరాబాద్‌ ఎన్నికల తర్వాత తెలంగాణ ముఖ్యమంత్రి కేసీఆర్‌ ఢిల్లీలో తనను కలిసి అత్యంత వినయంగా శాలువా కప్పి మరీ బీఆర్‌ఎస్‌ను ఎన్డీయేలో చేర్చుకోవలసినదిగా అభ్యర్థించారని చెప్పారు. తన కుమారుడైన కేటీఆర్‌ను ముఖ్యమంత్రి చేయాలనుకుంటున్నానని, అందుకు మీ ఆశీస్సులు కావాలని కోరారని కూడా చెప్పుకొచ్చారు. ‘‘మీరేమైనా రాజులా? వారసులకు సింహాసనాన్ని అప్పగించడానికి’’ అని ఆ సందర్భంగా కేసీఆర్‌ను హెచ్చరించానని కూడా మోదీ చెప్పారు. ‘‘మీకు ఓ రహస్యం చెప్పనా...’’ అంటూ మొదలుపెట్టి ఆయన ఈ విషయాలు చెప్పారు.


ప్రధానమంత్రి స్థాయి వ్యక్తి ఒక ఆంతరంగిక సంభాషణను ఇలా వెల్లడించడం పలువురిని ఆశ్చర్యానికి గురి చేసింది. అంతర్గత సంభాషణలను బహిర్గతం చేయడం వల్ల ప్రధానమంత్రి తన స్థాయి తగ్గించుకున్నారని చెప్పవచ్చు. రహస్యాన్ని బహిర్గతం చేయడం వల్ల ఆయనకు గానీ, భారతీయ జనతా పార్టీకి గానీ లాభం కంటే నష్టమే ఎక్కువ జరిగిందన్న అభిప్రాయం ఏర్పడింది. ప్రధానమంత్రి పదవిలో ఉన్న వారిని అధికారపక్షంతో పాటు ప్రతిపక్షంలో ఉన్నవారు కూడా కలసి అనేక రాజకీయ అంశాలను పంచుకోవడం సహజం. తనను కలసిన ముఖ్యమంత్రులు మనసులోని మాటలను చెప్పుకొంటారు. కష్టసుఖాలు పంచుకుంటారు. తెలంగాణ ముఖ్యమంత్రి కేసీఆర్‌ కూడా నరేంద్ర మోదీని కలిసి తన మనసులోని మాటను చెప్పుకునే ఉంటారు. అయితే ప్రధానమంత్రి నోటి నుంచి నాటి అంతర్గత సంభాషణ బహిర్గతం కావడం మాత్రం విస్మయానికి గురిచేస్తోంది. ప్రధానమంత్రి స్థాయికి ఇది తగదని బీజేపీ నాయకులు కూడా అంగీకరిస్తున్నారు. ఇంతకీ నరేంద్ర మోదీ ఏమి ఆశించి నాటి రహస్యాన్ని చెప్పారోగానీ, ఇలా చేయడం రాజకీయంగా, వ్యక్తిగతంగా కూడా ఆయనకు నష్టమే కలిగించింది.


భారత రాష్ట్ర సమితి, భారతీయ జనతా పార్టీ మధ్య ఏదో రహస్య అవగాహన ఏర్పడిందన్న అభిప్రాయం తెలంగాణలో విస్తృతంగా ప్రచారంలో ఉన్న తరుణంలో ప్రధాని ఇలా మాట్లాడటంతో సదరు ప్రచారానికి ఊతం ఇచ్చినట్టయింది. ఈ పరిణామం అంతిమంగా కాంగ్రెస్‌ పార్టీకి ప్రయోజనం చేకూర్చుతుంది కూడా! ఎన్డీయేలో తమను చేర్చుకోవాలని కేసీఆర్‌ నిజంగా అభ్యర్థించి ఉంటే ఆ విషయాన్ని ప్రధానమంత్రి స్వయంగా చెప్పకుండా బీజేపీ రాష్ట్ర నాయకులు ఎవరైనా చెప్పి ఉంటే అది వేరుగా ఉండేది. అలా కాకుండా ప్రధానమంత్రే స్వయంగా ప్రకటించడం అనైతికం. తన మాటల చాతుర్యంతో ప్రతిపక్షాలకు మాటల్లేకుండా చేస్తూ వచ్చిన నరేంద్ర మోదీ ఇప్పుడు మొదటిసారిగా తప్పులో కాలేశారు.


ప్రధానమంత్రి నోటి నుంచి ఈ రహస్యం వెలువడిన వెంటనే బీఆర్‌ఎస్‌ ప్రతిస్పందించింది. ‘నేను ముఖ్యమంత్రి కావడానికి మోదీ ఆశీస్సులు ఎందుకు? ప్రజల ఆశీర్వాదం కావాలిగానీ!’ అని మంత్రి కేటీఆర్‌ బదులిచ్చారు. ఆయన అంతటితో ఆగకుండా ఎన్డీయేలో చేరడానికి తామేమీ ఆరాటపడలేదని, నిజానికి 2018 ఎన్నికల సమయంలో అప్పటి బీజేపీ రాష్ట్ర అధ్యక్షుడు డాక్టర్‌ లక్ష్మణ్‌ తమను కలసి పొత్తు పెట్టుకుందామన్న ప్రతిపాదన తెచ్చారని కేటీఆర్‌ మరో గుట్టు విప్పారు. అటు ప్రధానమంత్రి నరేంద్ర మోదీ, ఇటు మంత్రి కేటీఆర్‌ పరస్పరం రహస్యాల గుట్టు విప్పడంతో కాంగ్రెస్‌ పార్టీ పరిస్థితి రొట్టె విరిగి నేతిలో పడ్డట్టు అయింది. ఈ ఇరువురి ప్రకటనల వల్ల పొత్తులకోసం అటు బీజేపీ, ఇటు బీఆర్‌ఎస్‌ కూడా ఉత్సుకత ప్రదర్శించినట్టు స్పష్టమవుతోంది. మరో నలభై రోజుల్లో ఎన్నికలు జరగనున్న వేళ ఇద్దరు నాయకులు చెప్పిన రహస్యాల వల్ల ఆ పార్టీలకు నష్టం జరిగే అవకాశం లేకపోలేదు. బీజేపీకి బీఆర్‌ఎస్‌ ‘బీ’ టీమ్‌ అని కాంగ్రెస్‌ పార్టీ ఇప్పటికే ప్రచారం చేస్తోంది. ఇప్పుడు గుట్టు రట్టు కావడంతో కాంగ్రెస్‌ ప్రచారానికి ఊతమిచ్చినట్టు అయింది.




నాడు ఇందిర.. నేడు మోదీ...


ప్రధాని మోదీ నోరు జారడం ఇప్పటిదాకా జరగలేదు. టైం బాగోలేనప్పుడు ఇలా జరుగుతుందేమో తెలియదు. నిజామాబాద్‌ సభలో ప్రధాని మోదీ ప్రసంగం పట్ల పలువురు అభ్యంతరం వ్యక్తంచేశారు. సొంత పార్టీ వారికి కూడా ఆయన మాటలు రుచించలేదు. నవంబరులో జరిగే ఎన్నికల్లో తనకు ఒక అవకాశం కల్పిస్తే కేసీఆర్‌ మింగిన అవినీతి సొమ్మును కక్కిస్తానని నరేంద్ర మోదీ చెప్పుకొచ్చారు. మోదీ ఈ దేశ ప్రధాని. తెలంగాణలో జరగనున్న ఎన్నికల్లో రాష్ట్ర ప్రభుత్వ ఏర్పాటుకు తనకు అవకాశం ఇవ్వాలని ఆయన కోరడం ఏమిటో అర్థం కావడంలేదు. భారతీయ జనతా పార్టీకి అవకాశం ఇవ్వాలని లేదా తెలంగాణకు చెందిన, తమ పార్టీకి చెందిన ఫలానా నాయకుడిపైన నమ్మకం ఉంచి అవకాశమివ్వాలని ఆయన కోరకపోవడం పలు ప్రశ్నలను రేకెత్తిస్తోంది. బీజేపీ స్థానంలో ‘నేను–నాకు’ అన్న మాటలే నరేంద్ర మోదీ నోటి వెంట వెలువడ్డాయి. ఒకప్పుడు ఇందిరాగాంధీ కూడా ఇలాగే వ్యవహరించేవారు. కాంగ్రెస్‌ పార్టీనే తనపై ఆధారపడేలా ఆమె పరిస్థితులను మార్చుకున్నారు. ఫలితంగా కాలక్రమంలో పార్టీ బలహీనపడి, రాష్ర్టాలలో ఆ పార్టీకి బలమైన నాయకులు లేకుండా పోయారు. ఆ తర్వాత ప్రాంతీయ పార్టీలు పురుడు పోసుకోవడం చూశాం. ఇప్పుడు భారతీయ జనతా పార్టీలో కూడా నరేంద్ర మోదీ అదే సంస్కృతిని తీసుకురావాలనుకుంటున్నారా? అంటే దానికి సమాధానం ఆయనే చెప్పాలి.


ప్రస్తుతానికి బీజేపీలో సమష్ఠి నాయకత్వం లేకుండా పోయింది. నిన్న మొన్నటి వరకు బీజేపీపై రాష్ర్టీయ స్వయం సేవక్‌ సంఘ్‌కు అదుపు ఉండేది. ఇప్పుడు పరిస్థితులు మారిపోయాయి. తమ అభిప్రాయాలను పట్టించుకోని పరిస్థితి ఉన్నప్పటికీ తాము కోరుకున్న బీజేపీ ప్రభుత్వమే ఉంది కదా అని సంఘ్‌ నాయకులు సర్ది చెప్పుకొంటున్నారు. ఇక బీజేపీలో నరేంద్ర మోదీ కళ్లలో కళ్లు పెట్టి చూసి మాట్లాడగల నాయకులే లేకుండా పోయారు. కేంద్ర మంత్రులు డమ్మీలుగా మారిపోయారని ఆ పార్టీ నాయకులే చెబుతున్నారు. ఒకప్పుడు ఇండియా అంటే ఇందిర, ఇందిర అంటే ఇండియా అన్న నినాదాన్ని కాంగ్రెస్‌ పార్టీలోని ఆమె భక్తులు డీకే బారువా వంటి వారు అందిపుచ్చుకున్నారు.


ఇప్పుడు బీజేపీ అంటే మోదీ – మోదీ అంటే బీజేపీ అని చెప్పుకొనే పరిస్థితి. వచ్చే ఏడాది జరగనున్న సార్వత్రిక ఎన్నికల్లో ఎన్డీయే మళ్లీ అధికారంలోకి వస్తే ‘భారత్‌ అంటే మోదీ – మోదీ అంటే భారత్‌’ అనే నినాదం వినిపిస్తుందేమో తెలియదు. వ్యక్తిపూజ పరాకాష్ఠకు చేరుకున్నప్పుడు ఇటువంటి పరిస్థితులు చోటుచేసుకుంటాయి. ఇందిరాగాంధీ భజన పెరిగినప్పుడే ఈ దేశంలో అత్యవసర పరిస్థితి వచ్చింది. ఎమర్జెన్సీ చేదు అనుభవాలను ప్రజలు ఇంకా మరచిపోలేదు. బీజేపీలో నరేంద్ర మోదీ వటవృక్షంలా పెరిగిపోవడం ఆ పార్టీ అంతర్గత వ్యవహారమే. వ్యక్తి ఆరాధనకు తావు ఇవ్వనంత వరకు ఎవరు ఎంత ఎత్తు ఎదిగినా ఫర్వాలేదు. జవహర్‌లాల్‌ నెహ్రూ ప్రధానమంత్రిగా ఉన్నప్పుడు కాంగ్రెస్‌ పార్టీలో వ్యక్తి పూజ లేదు. నెహ్రూ సమ ఉజ్జీలైన నాయకులు ఎందరో ఆ పార్టీలో ఉండేవారు. ఇందిరా గాంధీ హయాం వచ్చే సరికి కాంగ్రెస్‌ పార్టీలో నాయకులు బలహీనపడ్డారు. మొత్తం పార్టీనే ఆమెపై ఆధారపడే పరిస్థితి వచ్చింది. ఫలితంగా ఇందిరా గాంధీలో నియంతృత్వ పోకడలు పొడచూపాయి.


ఇప్పుడు భారతీయ జనతా పార్టీలో కూడా అటువంటి పరిస్థితి ఏర్పడకూడదని కోరుకోవడంలో తప్పు లేదు. నరేంద్ర మోదీలో నియంతృత్వ పోకడలు కనిపిస్తున్నాయన్న అభిప్రాయం ఇప్పటికే ఉంది. పార్టీపరంగా తీసుకొనే నిర్ణయాలన్నీ ఆయన కనుసన్నల్లోనే జరుగుతున్నాయి. ప్రభుత్వపరంగా, పార్టీపరంగా మోదీ తీసుకొనే నిర్ణయాల గురించి బీజేపీలో ఇంకెవరికీ తెలియదనడంలో అతిశయోక్తి లేదు. కేంద్ర హోం మంత్రి అమిత్‌ షా బీజేపీలో నంబర్‌ 2గా చలామణి అవుతున్నప్పటికీ ఆయన కూడా స్వతంత్రంగా ఏ నిర్ణయం తీసుకోలేని పరిస్థితి ఉందని ఆ పార్టీ నాయకులే చెబుతున్నారు. ప్రధాని మోదీ ఆదేశాలను అమలు చేయడం వరకే అమిత్‌ షా పాత్ర పరిమితం అని అంటారు. ఇటీవలి కాలంలో మోదీ–షాల మధ్య కూడా అభిప్రాయ భేదాలు ఏర్పడ్డాయని అంటున్నారు. త్వరలో ఎన్నికలు జరగనున్న రాజస్థాన్‌, మధ్యప్రదేశ్‌ రాష్ర్టాలలో స్థానిక నాయకత్వాన్ని బలహీనపరిచే ప్రయత్నాలు మొదలయ్యాయి. కేంద్ర నాయకత్వం ఈ రాష్ర్టాలకు ఇతరులను దిగుమతి చేసింది. దీంతో పార్టీని ఏకతాటిపై నడిపేవారు లేకుండా పోయారు. నిర్ణయాలకోసం ఢిల్లీ వైపు చూడాల్సిన పరిస్థితి ఏర్పడిందట! దిగుమతి కాబడ్డ నాయకులు కూడా మోదీ వర్గం, షా వర్గంగా విడిపోయారు. ఈ నేపథ్యంలోనే ప్రధాని మోదీ ‘నాకు అవకాశం ఇవ్వండి’ అని రాష్ర్టాలలో కూడా సరికొత్త రాగం అందుకున్నారని చెబుతున్నారు.


మొత్తం పార్టీని తన చెప్పుచేతల్లోకి తీసుకునేందుకు మోదీ చేస్తున్న ప్రయత్నాలకు ప్రస్తుతానికి చెక్‌ పెట్టేవారు ఆ పార్టీలో లేరు. అమిత్‌ షా కూడా మోదీని ఎదిరించి నిలువలేని పరిస్థితి. ప్రాంతీయ పార్టీలలో కుటుంబ వారసత్వం ఉంటుందని, నియంతృత్వ పోకడలు పెరిగి పోతున్నాయని బీజేపీ విమర్శిస్తోంది. ఈ విమర్శలలో నిజం ఉంది కూడా. అయితే అదే సమయంలో భారతీయ జనతా పార్టీ కూడా మోదీ నేతృత్వంలో జాతీయ స్థాయి ప్రాంతీయ పార్టీగా మారిపోయిందనడంలో అతిశయోక్తి లేదు. సమష్ఠి నాయకత్వం స్థానంలో అంతా మోదీనే అన్న భావన ఏర్పడింది. అందుకే ప్రధాని మోదీ నోటి వెంట నేను–నాకు, ఒక అవకాశం ఇవ్వండి వంటి పదాలు వెలువడుతూ ఉండవచ్చు. తెలంగాణలో బండి సంజయ్‌ నాయకత్వాన్ని ఎందుకు మార్చారో రాష్ర్టానికి చెందిన బీజేపీ నేతలు ఎవరూ చెప్పలేకపోతున్నారు.


ఉత్తరాది మోడల్‌నే ఇక్కడా అమలు చేయాలని అనుకోవడం వల్లనే తెలంగాణలో బీజేపీకి ప్రస్తుత పరిస్థితి ఏర్పడింది. సరైన కారణం లేకుండా మునుగోడులో ఉప ఎన్నిక తీసుకురావడం, ఆ ఎన్నికల్లో ఓడిపోవడంతో పార్టీ బలహీనపడటం మొదలైంది. బీజేపీ కేంద్ర నాయకత్వం నిర్ణయాల కారణంగా మాత్రమే తెలంగాణలో కాంగ్రెస్‌ పార్టీ పుంజుకోవడానికి అవకాశం ఏర్పడిందని చెప్పవచ్చు. ఈ నేపథ్యంలో ప్రధాని మోదీ విప్పిన పొత్తుల గుట్టుతో బీజేపీతో పాటు బీఆర్‌ఎస్‌ కూడా ఆత్మరక్షణలో పడిపోయింది. దీనికి తోడు బీజేపీకి 30 సీట్లు వచ్చినా తామే ప్రభుత్వం ఏర్పాటు చేస్తామని బీఎల్‌ సంతోష్‌ శుక్రవారం నాడు ప్రకటించారు. అంటే బీఆర్‌ఎస్‌తో కలసి ప్రభుత్వ ఏర్పాటుకు స్కెచ్‌ వేస్తున్నారన్న అనుమానం ఎవరికైనా కలుగుతుంది. కేంద్ర నాయకుల ఎత్తుగడలు కర్ణాటకలో వికటించాయి. స్థానిక నాయకత్వం ప్రమేయం లేకుండా గతంలో కాంగ్రెస్‌ వ్యవహరించినట్టుగానే ఇప్పుడు బీజేపీ కూడా వ్యవహరిస్తూ నిర్ణయాలు తీసుకుంటోంది. ఫలితంగా దక్షిణాదిన బీజేపీ బలపడకపోగా బలహీనపడుతోంది.


మోదీని చూసి రాష్ట్ర ప్రభుత్వాలను ఇక్కడ ఎన్నుకోవాలంటే స్థానిక నాయకుల ముఖాలకు ఇక విలువేం ఉంటుంది? కర్ణాటకలో యడ్యూరప్పను పక్కన పెట్టాకే అక్కడ బీజేపీ బలహీనపడింది. తెలంగాణలో ఏమి జరుగుతున్నదో చూస్తున్నారు. బీఎల్‌ సంతోష్‌ను చూసి లేదా ఆయన చెప్పే మాటలను నమ్మి ఇక్కడ ప్రజలు ఓటు వేయరు. తెలంగాణ సమాజం కేసీఆర్‌ అనుకూల, వ్యతిరేక శిబిరాలుగా విడిపోయింది. ఈ పరిస్థితులలో కేసీఆర్‌ వ్యతిరేక శిబిరంలో నమ్మకం కలిగించగలిగే పార్టీకి మాత్రమే ఆదరణ ఉంటుంది. పొత్తుల కోసం బీజేపీ– బీఆర్‌ఎస్‌ తెరవెనుక ప్రయత్నాలు చేశాయనే గుట్టు రట్టు చేసుకోవడం వల్ల ఉభయ పక్షాలకూ నష్టమే జరుగుతుంది తప్ప లాభం కలగదు. నరేంద్ర మోదీలాంటి అపర చాణక్యుడికి ఈ మాత్రం లాజిక్‌ తెలియదా?



వింత... విషాదం!


ఇప్పుడు ఆంధ్రప్రదేశ్‌ రాజకీయాలకు వద్దాం! మాజీ ముఖ్యమంత్రి, తెలుగుదేశం పార్టీ అధ్యక్షుడు చంద్రబాబు నాయుడును స్కిల్‌ కేసులో జైలుకు పంపి నెల అవుతోంది. న్యాయం ఆయనతో దోబూచులాడుతోంది. జస్టిస్‌ డిలేడ్‌ ఈజ్‌ జస్టిస్‌ డినైడ్‌ అని అంటారు. చంద్రబాబుకు న్యాయం దొరకడంలో జాప్యం జరగడం ప్రజల్లో అనేక ప్రశ్నలు లేవనెత్తుతోంది. వంద మంది దోషులు తప్పించుకున్నా ఫర్వాలేదు గానీ ఒక్క నిర్దోషికి కూడా శిక్ష పడకూడదని మన న్యాయశాస్త్రమే చెబుతున్నది.


స్కిల్‌ కేసును దర్యాప్తు చేస్తున్న అధికారులు చాలాకాలంగా దర్యాప్తు చేస్తున్నప్పటికీ ఈ వ్యవహారంలో చంద్రబాబుకు కమీషన్లు ముట్టాయని ఆధారాలు సేకరించలేకపోయారు. తనపై వచ్చిన ఆరోపణలకు సంబంధించి కనీస ఆధారాలు లభించకపోయినా చంద్రబాబు నెల రోజులుగా జైలుకే పరిమితం కావడం న్యాయ వ్యవస్థలోని డొల్ల తనాన్ని బయట పెడుతోంది. ఈ కేసులో వాదనలు సుదీర్ఘంగా కొనసాగడమే కాకుండా తీర్పులు కూడా రిజర్వు అవుతున్నాయి.


చంద్రబాబు మాత్రం జైలు జీవితం గడుపుతున్నారు. డబ్బు చేతులు మారినట్టు కనీస ఆధారాలు కూడా లేని ఒక కేసులో చంద్రబాబు స్థాయి నాయకుడిని నెల రోజులుగా రిమాండ్‌లో ఉంచడం వింతగా ఉంది. ఢిల్లీ లిక్కర్‌ కుంభకోణంలో అరెస్టు కాబడిన ఢిల్లీ ఉప ముఖ్యమంత్రి మనీశ్‌ సిసోడియా బెయిలు దరఖాస్తు విచారణ సందర్భంగా సుప్రీంకోర్టు చేసిన వ్యాఖ్యలు ఇక్కడ గమనార్హం. ‘సిసోడియాపై మోపిన ఆరోపణలను న్యాయ సమీక్షలో రెండే రెండు నిమిషాల్లో కొట్టివేస్తారు. ఆయన పాత్రకు సంబంధించి ఆధారాలే లేవు’’ అని సుప్రీంకోర్టు వ్యాఖ్యానించింది. అయినా మనీశ్‌ సిసోడియా ఎనిమిది నెలలుగా జైల్లో నిర్బంధించబడ్డారు.


ఇప్పుడు చంద్రబాబు పరిస్థితి కూడా ఇంచుమించు ఇలాగే ఉంది. ఆయనకు కమీషన్లు ముట్టినట్టు ఆధారాలు ఉన్నాయా? లేవా? అంటే లేవనే చెప్పాలి. వరుసగా ఒకరి నుంచి ఒకరికి అక్రమంగా లావాదేవీలు జరిగినట్టు సూచించే మనీ ట్రేల్‌ (Money Trail) జరిగినట్టు ఫోరెన్సిక్‌ ఆడిట్‌ నివేదికలో నిరూపించలేదు. సీఐడీ దర్యాప్తులో కూడా మనీ ట్రేల్‌ జరిగిందని నిరూపించలేకపోయారు. చివరికి తెలుగుదేశం పార్టీ ఖాతాలోకి వచ్చిన 27 కోట్ల రూపాయల సభ్యత్వ రుసుము మొత్తాన్ని స్కిల్‌ కేసులో ముడుపులతో ముడిపెట్టే ప్రయత్నం చేస్తున్నారు. అవినీతి కేసులలో మనీ ట్రేల్‌కు సంబంధించి కనీస ఆధారాలు ఉన్నాయా లేవా అని చూడకుండా మెకానికల్‌గా రిమాండ్‌ విధించడం ప్రస్తుత న్యాయ వ్యవస్థలో కనిపిస్తున్న లోపం.


లిక్కర్‌ కుంభకోణంలో సిసోడియా పాత్రపై ఆధారాలు లేకపోయినా ఎనిమిది నెలలుగా రిమాండ్‌లో ఉంచడం సమర్థనీయమా? చంద్రబాబు విషయంలో కూడా ఇలాగే జరుగుతోంది. కోడి కత్తి కేసులో పెద్ద డ్రామా చోటుచేసుకుందని వెల్లడయ్యాక కూడా నిందితుడు శ్రీనివాసరావును ఐదేళ్లుగా జైల్లోనే నిర్బంధించి ఉంచడం న్యాయ వ్యవస్థకు శోభనివ్వదు. ఆంధ్రప్రదేశ్‌ ముఖ్యమంత్రి జగన్మోహన్‌ రెడ్డి విషయంలో మనీ ట్రేల్‌ జరిగినట్టు సీబీఐ ప్రాథమిక ఆధారాలు సేకరించగలిగింది. సదరు ఆధారాలు న్యాయ సమీక్షలో నిలుస్తాయా? లేదా? అన్నది వేరే విషయం. కనీస ఆధారాలనైతే సేకరించారు కదా! చంద్రబాబు విషయంలో మనీ ట్రేల్‌ జరిగినట్టు దర్యాప్తు సంస్థ ఇంతవరకు న్యాయస్థానానికి ఆధారాలు సమర్పించలేదు. అదేమంటే దర్యాప్తు కీలక దశలో ఉందని అంటారు. దర్యాప్తులో ఆధారాలు సేకరించకపోయినా చంద్రబాబును రిమాండ్‌కు పంపడం ఏమిటో అర్థం కాదు. కనీసం రెండు నెలలైనా చంద్రబాబును జైలుకే పరిమితం చేయాలన్నది పాలకుల కోరికట! పాలకుల కోరిక ఫలిస్తుందో లేదో తెలియదుగానీ నిర్దోషి అయినప్పటికీ, చంద్రబాబు అన్యాయంగా జైలు జీవితం గడుపుతున్నారు. ఈ దుస్థితికి పరిష్కారాన్ని న్యాయ వ్యవస్థ మాత్రమే అన్వేషించాలి. అప్పటివరకు నిర్దోషులు జైళ్లలో, దోషులు బయట ఉంటారు. ఇదొక విషాద పరిణామం!


ఏపీ పరిస్థితికి అద్దం...


ఇప్పుడు తెలంగాణ మంత్రి కేటీఆర్‌ చేసిన వ్యాఖ్యల విషయానికి వద్దాం! తెలంగాణలో పెట్టుబడులు పెడుతున్న కంపెనీలను ‘ఆంధ్రప్రదేశ్‌కు కూడా వెళ్లి పెట్టుబడులు పెట్టండి. జగనన్నకు చెప్పి భూమి ఇప్పిస్తాను’ అని కేటీఆర్‌ వ్యాఖ్యానించారు. అందరూ బాగుండాలి కదా అని కూడా ఆయన అన్నారు. ఈ వ్యాఖ్యలు సీరియస్‌గా చేశారా? లేక వ్యంగ్యంగా అన్నారో తెలియదు. అయితే కేటీఆర్‌ వ్యాఖ్యలు ఆంధ్రప్రదేశ్‌ దుస్థితికి అద్దం పడుతున్నాయి. రాష్ట్రంలో పెట్టుబడులు పెట్టండి అని పొరుగు రాష్ర్టాల వారు కూడా చెబుతున్నారుగానీ ఘనత వహించిన జగన్మోహన్‌ రెడ్డి గారికి అవేవీ పట్టవు. ప్రత్యర్థులను జైలుకు పంపడం ఎలా? అన్న దానిపైనే ఆయన బిజీగా ఉన్నారు. కేటీఆర్‌ వ్యాఖ్యలు చూశాకైనా ఆంధ్రప్రదేశ్‌ ప్రజలు కళ్లు తెరుస్తారా?


ఆర్కే


Monday, September 4, 2023

Ranjan Gogoi - CJI - RS Member

Gogoi was nominated to the Rajya Sabha by President Ram Nath Kovind. On 19 March 2020, he took the oath of office as a Member of Parliament in the Rajya Sabha in the presence of the Chairman of Rajya Sabha.



Former CJI Ranjan Gogoi Still Hasn't Asked a Single Question in the Rajya Sabha

He has also not introduced any private member's Bill, and the section of the Rajya Sabha website where you can find audio and video recordings of MPs says "no records found" for Gogoi.


Ex-CJI Ranjan Gogoi as MP: Abysmal Attendance in Parliament, Zero Lawmaking

Newsclick Report | 15 Feb 2023

Law

Politics

India

Contrary to his claims about why he became an MP, the former CJI has not intervened in any issue pertaining to the judiciary or the Northeast.

Gogoi

Former CJI Ranjan Gogoi in Parliament. Photo credit: Rediff.com


New Delhi: Amid notable post-retirement postings awarded to certain retired judges by the government, former Chief Justice of India Ranjan Gogoi has held his position for a considerable time. However, as a Rajya Sabha MP, Gogoi’s performance in Parliament has been rather poor along with a meagre 29% attendance over the last three years, The Print reported. In comparison, the average attendance of MPs is 79%.


Gogoi’s performance comes into question amid the development that three of the four retired judges on the Constitution bench of the Supreme Court that delivered the Ayodhya verdict in 2019 have received plum government posts within months of their retirement, NewsClick has reported. In the latest, the President of India appointed Justice S. Abdul Nazeer as the Governor of Andhra Pradesh just 40 days after the judge’s retirement from the Supreme Court.


Gogoi was the first to retire among the four following the Ayodhya verdict in 2019. Within months, he was nominated as a member of the Rajya Sabha and took the oath of office in March 2020. Afterwards, Justice Ashok Bhushan retired in July 2021, and was appointed the Chairperson of the National Company Law Appellate Tribunal in November 2021.


 


On his controversial appointment to the Upper House, Gogoi had told a news channel, “I have accepted the offer of nomination to the Rajya Sabha because of strong conviction that the legislature and judiciary must, at some point of time, work together for nation-building. My presence in Parliament will be an opportunity to project the views of the judiciary before the legislature and vice-versa.”


In addition, Gogoi also defended his decision to become an MP in his memoir Justice for the Judge, saying that he had accepted the nomination as he wanted to raise issues regarding the Northeastern region, from where he hails.


However, the former CJI has not intervened in any issue pertaining to the judiciary or the Northeast.


In the three years since his nomination, there have been eight Rajya Sabha sessions, and Gogoi has not asked any question in the Parliament, The Print reported. According to the report, Parliament records show that he has also not participated in any discussion or presented any private member’s bill.


The report further says that Gogoi has attended the current budget session for only six of 10 days till February 13. Moreover, during the previous budget session, he was present for just seven of 29 days.


Even though Gogoi’s attendance marginally went up in the past few sessions, he did not make any notable intervention in terms of legislation, the report said.


So far, Gogoi has neither asked any starred or unstarred questions in the Upper House nor has he participated in any debate. The national average of such participation by MPs in the Parliament is 56.9.


Comparing Gogoi’s performance with that of athlete PT Usha, who was nominated in July 2022, the report pointed out that the latter has an average attendance of 91% over three sessions, has asked eight questions and participated in three debates.


In December 2021, Gogoi said in an interview that he had not been attending the Rajya Sabha due to medical advisory amid the Covid-19 pandemic, as per the report.


After his nomination to the Upper House, Gogoi was appointed to the Parliamentary Standing Committee on External Affairs in  July 2020. The next year, he was made a member of the Standing Committee on Communications and IT.


Citing sources, The Print reported that after Gogoi was renominated to the External Affairs committee in September 2022, he skipped all its nine meetings. Even as a part of the committee on communications for eight months, he remained absent from all meetings, as per Rajya Sabha records cited by the report.


The Parliamentary corruption at its peak

 పరాకాష్ఠలో పార్లమెంటరీ భ్రష్టత్వం

ABN , First Publish Date - 2023-07-26T01:35:49+05:30 IST

భారత పార్లమెంటరీ ప్రజాస్వామ్యం తనను తాను అంతం చేసుకుంటున్నదా? ఈ విషయమై అనుమానాలు రోజురోజుకూ పెరిగిపోతున్నాయి. పార్లమెంట్ బయట ఎన్నికల రాజకీయాలు ఎలాగూ...

పరాకాష్ఠలో పార్లమెంటరీ భ్రష్టత్వం

భారత పార్లమెంటరీ ప్రజాస్వామ్యం తనను తాను అంతం చేసుకుంటున్నదా? ఈ విషయమై అనుమానాలు రోజురోజుకూ పెరిగిపోతున్నాయి. పార్లమెంట్ బయట ఎన్నికల రాజకీయాలు ఎలాగూ ప్రహసనప్రాయమయ్యాయి. వేల కోట్లతో ఓట్లు కొనుక్కోవడాలు, ఉచిత తాయిలాలు, కుల, మత భావోద్వేగాలను దట్టించడం మూలాన అసలు ఎన్నికయిన ప్రజాప్రతినిధులు సరైన వారేనా అన్న అనుమానం మొదటి దశలోనే కలుగుతుంది. ఇక ఎన్నికైన తర్వాత వారు తాము గెలిచిన పార్టీలో ఉంటారా లేదా అన్న అనుమానాలకు కూడా అనేక సంఘటనలు ఆస్కారం కలిగిస్తున్నాయి. పోనీ కనీసం ఎన్నికైన ప్రజాప్రతినిధులు పార్లమెంట్, చట్టసభలను సవ్యంగా నడిపిస్తారా అంటే అదీ చెప్పడానికి వీల్లేని పరిస్థితి ఏర్పడింది. మన పార్లమెంటరీ వ్యవస్థలో పెచ్చరిల్లుతున్న దుష్పరిణామాలకు ప్రధానమంత్రి నరేంద్రమోదీ అంతం పలుకుతారని తొమ్మిది సంవత్సరాలకు ముందు ఆశించిన వారు ఎందరో ఉన్నారు. అసలు మోదీకే పార్లమెంటరీ ప్రజాస్వామ్యం సవ్యంగా సాగడం ఇష్టం లేదా అన్న అనుమానాలకు వారందరూ ఇప్పుడు గురవుతున్నారు.


పార్లమెంట్ వర్షాకాల సమావేశాలు గత నాలుగు రోజులుగా స్తంభించిపోతున్నాయి. కారణమేమిటో మరి చెప్పాలా? మణిపూర్‌లో రెండు నెలలకు పైగా కొనసాగుతున్న దారుణ మారణకాండపై ప్రధానమంత్రి నరేంద్రమోదీ ఉభయ సభల్లో మాట్లాడాలని ప్రతిపక్షాలు డిమాండ్ చేయడమే. పార్లమెంట్ సరిగ్గా సాగాలనే సదుద్దేశం ఉంటే మోదీ మొదటి రోజే మణిపూర్ గురించి సభలోనే ప్రకటన చేసి ఇలాంటి తీవ్రమైన అంశంపై అన్ని పక్షాలూ పరిష్కార మార్గాన్ని అన్వేషించాలని అభ్యర్థించేవారు. 2001లో మణిపూర్‌లో ఇలాంటి కల్లోలమే సంభవించినప్పుడు అప్పటి ప్రధానమంత్రి అటల్ బిహారీ వాజపేయి రెండుసార్లు అఖిలపక్ష సమావేశం నిర్వహించారని, సాధారణ పరిస్థితులు నెలకొనేందుకు సహకరించాల్సిందిగా మణిపూర్ ప్రజలను అభ్యర్థించారని ప్రతిపక్షాలు గుర్తు చేస్తున్నాయి. ప్రధాని మోదీ ఈ వర్షాకాల సమావేశాలు ప్రారంభమైన రోజు మీడియాతో మాట్లాడుతూ మణిపూర్‌లో మహిళలపై జరిగిన అత్యాచారాన్ని ఖండించారు. అయితే ఆ రాష్ట్రంలో జాతుల ఘర్షణ సమస్యను ఏ విధంగా పరిష్కరించాలనుకుంటున్నారో చెప్పలేదు. నిజానికి ఇద్దరు మణిపూర్ మహిళలను వివస్త్రలను చేసి, ఊరేగించిన సంఘటన వెలుగులోకి రాకపోతే ప్రధాని నోరు విప్పేవారు కాదని మణిపూర్‌లో స్థానిక బిజెపి ఎమ్మెల్యే పాలోయిన్ లాల్ హోకిప్ అన్నారు. ‘79 రోజులుగా ఘోరాలు జరుగుతున్నా మోదీ నోరు విప్పలేదు. ఇలాంటి ఘటనలను ప్రధానమంత్రి స్థాయిలో ఉన్నవారు ఒక్కసారైనా ఖండించకపోయినా దారుణమే’ అని ఆయన వ్యాఖ్యానించారు. ప్రజాప్రతినిధులుగా తాము అక్కడ జరుగుతున్న దారుణాలను గురించి వివరించేందుకు ప్రధానమంత్రి అపాయింట్‌మెంట్ కోరామని, కాని ఆయన ప్రాధాన్యాలు వేరని ఆ ఎమ్మెల్యే వ్యాఖ్యానించారు. అంతా చూస్తుంటే మణిపూర్ ముఖ్యమంత్రి బీరేన్ సింగే హంతక ముఠాలతో కుమ్మక్కైనట్లు కనపడుతోందని, ఒక జాతి జాతినే నిర్మూలించేందుకు ప్రయత్నాలు జరుగుతున్నాయని కూడా ఆయన అన్నారు 17వ లోక్‌సభ 1952 తర్వాత అతి తక్కువ రోజులు సమావేశం అయిన చట్టసభగా చరిత్ర పుటల్లో రికార్డు కానున్నదని పిఆర్ఎస్ లెజిస్లేటివ్ రీసర్చ్ ఇప్పటికే వెల్లడించింది. ఇప్పటి వరకూ కేవలం 230 రోజులే సభ సమావేశమైంది. అంటే ఏడాదికి 58 రోజులు మాత్రమే పార్లమెంట్ సమావేశమవుతోంది, ప్రస్తుత పార్లమెంట్ జరుగుతున్న తీరు చూస్తుంటే మున్ముందు కూడా సభ సవ్యంగా జరిగే అవకాశాలు కనపడడం లేదు. ప్రభుత్వ వైఖరి మూలంగా ఈ ఏడాది పార్లమెంట్ బడ్జెట్ సమావేశాలు కూడా సవ్యంగా సాగలేదు. లోక్‌సభ 34 శాతం, రాజ్యసభ 24 శాతం మాత్రమే కార్యకలాపాలు నిర్వహించాయి. అసలు ఎటువంటి చర్చ లేకుండానే బడ్జెట్‌ను ఆమోదించారు. అయిదు మంత్రిత్వ శాఖలకు సంబంధించి రూ.11 లక్షల కోట్ల వ్యయం, వివిధ మంత్రిత్వ శాఖల రూ.42 లక్షల కోట్ల వ్యయం ఎలాంటి చర్చలు లేకుండానే ఆమోదం పొందాయి. రెండో విడత బడ్జెట్ సెషన్ కార్యకలాపాలు పూర్తిగా కొట్టుకుపోయాయి. చివరిలో ఉభయ సభల సభాపతులు ఆనవాయితీగా ఏర్పాటు చేసే తేనేటి విందును కూడా ప్రతిపక్ష నేతలు బహిష్కరించారంటే అధికార, ప్రతిపక్ష పార్టీల మధ్య ఎంత తీవ్ర అగాధం ఏర్పడిందో అర్థమవుతుంది. ఇదే సెషన్ చివరిలో కాంగ్రెస్ నేత రాహుల్ గాంధీకి సూరత్ కోర్టు రెండేళ్ల జైలుశిక్ష విధించడం, ఆయనను పార్లమెంట్ నుంచి బహిష్కరించడం, ఇల్లు ఖాళీ చేయమని నోటీసు పంపడం వెంటవెంటనే జరిగిపోయాయి 2022 శీతాకాల సమావేశాలు కూడా ఉభయ సభలు షెడ్యూల్ కంటే ఆరు రోజుల ముందే నిరవధికంగా వాయిదా పడ్డాయి. అంతకు ముందు వర్షాకాల సమావేశాల్లో ఒకేసారి 24 మంది రాజ్యసభ సభ్యులను సస్పెండ్ చేసి నాలుగురోజుల ముందే వాయిదా వేశారు. మొదటి రెండు వారాలు ఉభయ సభల్లో ఏ చర్చా జరగలేదు. చివరకు సస్పెన్షన్లను ఎత్తి వేసి ధరల పెరుగుదలపై ఆర్థిక మంత్రి నిర్మలా సీతారామన్ మాట్లాడారు.



సాధారణంగా ప్రతిపక్షాలు పార్లమెంట్ సమావేశాల సమయంలో ఏమి డిమాండ్ చేస్తాయి? ఆ సమయంలో దేశంలో జరిగిన ఒక ముఖ్యమైన ఘటనపై చర్చ జరగాలనో, పార్లమెంటరీ కమిటీనో డిమాండ్ చేస్తాయి. అదానీపై హిండెన్ బర్గ్ నివేదిక వచ్చినప్పుడు సంయుక్త పార్లమెంటరీ కమిటీ వేయాలని అడగడం సహజం. గతంలో ఇలాంటి కుంభకోణాలు జరిగినప్పుడు ప్రతిపక్షంలో ఉన్న బిజెపి నేతలూ ఇదే విధంగా డిమాండ్ చేశారు కదా! అదే విధంగా మణిపూర్ లాంటి ఘటన జరిగినప్పుడు ప్రధానమంత్రి సభలో మాట్లాడాలని డిమాండ్ చేయడం కూడా సముచితమే. ఇలాంటి వాటిని ముందే ఊహించి ప్రతిపక్షాలతో మాట్లాడి, పరిష్కార మార్గాలు కనుక్కుని సభ సవ్యంగా జరిగేలా చూడాల్సిన బాధ్యత ప్రభుత్వానిది. కాని ప్రభుత్వమే సంఘర్షణాయుత వైఖరిని అవలంబిస్తే ఎవరేమి చేయగలరు? మణిపూర్‌పై ప్రతిపక్షాలు ఎంత గగ్గోలు పెట్టినా మోదీ మాత్రం సభలో మాట్లాడకూడదని, గందరగోళంలోనే బిల్లులు ఆమోదించాలని బిజెపి వ్యూహకర్తలు ఇప్పటికే నిర్ణయించినట్లు తెలిసింది. రాజుకంటే మొండివాడు బలవంతుడని అంటారు. కాని రాజే మొండివాడైతే ఏం చేయగలం?


ప్రజాస్వామ్యానికి ప్రాణప్రదమైన ఏకాభిప్రాయ సాధనకు ప్రయత్నించడాన్ని మోదీ సర్కార్ ఏనాడో మరచిపోయింది. ఇప్పుడు కనీసం చర్చలకు కూడా అవకాశం కల్పించకూడదని నిర్ణయించుకున్నట్లు స్పష్టమవుతోంది. పార్లమెంటరీ సంయుక్త కమిటీ మాట పక్కన పెడితే కీలకమైన బిల్లులను పార్లమెంటరీ స్టాండింగ్ కమిటీలకు నివేదించే పద్ధతిని కూడా మోదీ ప్రభుత్వం విస్మరించినట్లు కనపడుతోంది. మోదీ హయాంలో 16వ లోక్‌సభలో కేవలం 25 శాతం బిల్లులను స్థాయీ సంఘాలకు నివేదిస్తే, ప్రస్తుత 17వ లోక్‌సభలో 15 శాతం బిల్లులను కూడా నివేదించలేదని అధికార వర్గాలు అంటున్నాయి. ఈ లోక్‌సభలో ఇంతవరకు కేవలం 14 బిల్లులను మాత్రమే కమిటీలకు పంపారు. అంతకు ముందు 60 నుంచి 70 శాతానికి పైగా బిల్లులను పార్లమెంట్‌లో స్థాయీ సంఘాలే చర్చించి సభ ఆమోదానికి పంపేవి. స్థాయీ సంఘాలకు విలువ లేకపోవడం వల్ల ప్రభుత్వం ప్రవేశపెట్టే బిల్లులు ప్రజల జీవితాలపై ఎలాంటి ప్రభావం చూపగలుగుతాయో, ప్రభుత్వ నిధులు పూర్తిగా ఖర్చవుతున్నాయో లేదో సమీక్షించే అవకాశం కూడా లేకపోయింది. వివిధ మంత్రిత్వ శాఖల పనితీరును చర్చించే సంప్రదాయాన్ని కూడా పక్కన పెట్టారు.


రాజ్యాంగంలోని 93వ అధికరణ ప్రకారం లోక్‌సభలో డిప్యూటీ స్పీకర్‌ను నియమించాల్సి ఉన్నది. 17వ లోక్‌సభ డిప్యూటీ స్పీకర్ లేకుండానే అంతమయ్యే అవకాశాలు కనిపిస్తున్నాయి. ముఖ్యమైన సమస్యలు తలెత్తినప్పుడు అన్ని విషయాలను పక్కన పెట్టి చర్చించేందుకు వీలు కల్పించే లోక్‌సభలో వాయిదా తీర్మానాల క్రింద కానీ రాజ్యసభలో 267వ నిబంధన క్రింద కానీ ఇచ్చిన నోటీసులను పూర్తిగా పక్కన పెడుతున్నారు.


2014లో పార్లమెంట్ సమావేశాలు ప్రారంభమయిన రోజు పార్లమెంట్ ద్వారం ముందు మోకరిల్లి సభలో అడుగుపెట్టిన మోదీ ఇటీవల నూతన పార్లమెంట్ భవనం ప్రారంభం సందర్భంగా రాజదండంతో ప్రవేశించారు. అయితే ఈ తొమ్మిదేళ్లలో పార్లమెంట్ సమావేశాల విషయంలో ఆయన వ్యవహరించిన వైఖరికీ, ఆయన ప్రదర్శించిన దృశ్యాలకూ ఎంతో వ్యత్యాసం కనపడుతున్నది. దేశంలోనే కాదు, వివిధ దేశాల్లో పర్యటిస్తూ అనేక ప్రసంగాలు చేసే మోదీ కీలకమైన అంశాలపై కనీసం పార్లమెంట్‌లో కూడా ఎందుకు మాట్లాడకుండా మౌనంగా ఉంటున్నారు? తొమ్మిది సంవత్సరాలుగా విలేఖరుల సమావేశం పెట్టకపోయినా పర్వాలేదేమో కాని ఒక దేశాధినేతగా మాట్లాడాల్సి వచ్చినప్పుడు మౌనం పాటించడంలో ఆయన ఉద్దేశమేమిటి? పెద్ద నోట్ల రద్దు సమయంలో సామాన్య జనం మైళ్ల పొడవున క్యూల్లో నిల్చోవాల్సి వచ్చినా, కొవిడ్ మహమ్మారి సందర్భంగా వేలాది వలస కూలీలు దిక్కులేని చావులు చచ్చినా, ఏడాది పొడవునా సాగు చట్టాలకు వ్యతిరేకంగా నిర్వహించిన ప్రదర్శనల్లో వందలాది రైతులు మరణించినా, బిజెపి ఎంపియే తమను లైంగికంగా వేధించారని మహిళా ఛాంపియన్ మల్లయోధులు నెలల తరబడి నిరసన ప్రదర్శనలు నిర్వహించినా మోదీ మౌనం పాటించారు. ఇవన్నీ ఒక ఎత్తు అయితే మణిపూర్‌లో జరుగుతున్న కల్లోలం మరో ఎత్తు. జాతిపర ఊచకోతకు గురై దాదాపు 50వేల మందికి పైగా ఇంకా శరణార్థుల శిబిరాల్లో తలదాచుకున్నారు. వేలాది మంది మిజోరంకు పారిపోయారు ఈ దేశానికి ఒక నిర్ణయాత్మక నాయకత్వం అందించాల్సిన మోదీ ప్రధానమంత్రే కాదు పార్లమెంట్ నేత కూడా. పార్లమెంట్‌కు అవసరమైన సమాధానాలు చెప్పి, అది సవ్యంగా నడిచేలా చూసే బాధ్యత కూడా ఆయనదే.


ఎ. కృష్ణారావు


(ఆంధ్రజ్యోతి ఢిల్లీ ప్రతినిధి)

Monday, June 12, 2023

Asking CBI to probe Balasore train accident is Modi govt.’s ‘headline management,’ alleges Congress

 Asking CBI to probe Balasore train accident is Modi govt.’s ‘headline management,’ alleges Congress

Congress also raised the issue of the 2016 Kanpur rail accident in which 150 lives were lost, and noted that the NIA has is yet to come out with its report

June 06, 2023 12:18 pm | Updated 08:35 pm IST - New Delhi


THE HINDU BUREAU

COMMENTSSHAREREAD LATER

Workers remove debris from the railway tracks during the restoration work at the triple train mishap site where over 270 people died and more than 1000 were injured, near Bahanaga Bazar in Balasore district, on June 5, 2023. 

Workers remove debris from the railway tracks during the restoration work at the triple train mishap site where over 270 people died and more than 1000 were injured, near Bahanaga Bazar in Balasore district, on June 5, 2023. | Photo Credit: PTI


The decision to hand over the investigations of the Balasore train accident, to the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) was part of the Narendra Modi government’s strategy of ‘headline management’ to divert attention from its own failures, the Congress alleged on June 6.


Addressing a press conference at the All India Congress Committee (AICC) headquarters, Congress spokesperson Supriya Shrinate asked why no accountability had been fixed even after 96 hours of the accident.


“How is it that there is no accountability, no responsibility. Instead of finding out what caused this grave accident in which almost 300 people died, the government is now spinning conspiracy theories. It is shifting focus from safety to all kinds of conspiracy theories like deliberate interference,” she told reporters.


Also read | CBI investigates crime, not rail accident, Congress chief Mallikarjun Kharge tells PM Modi in a four-page letter


At a time when the Railway Minister should resign by taking moral responsibility, new theories were being created to “divert” attention, she said, adding initial reports stated that the accident occurred due to interlocking and signal failure as well as low track maintenance.


Congress general secretary Jairam Ramesh had tweeted, “Even before the Commissioner of Railway Safety (CRS) has submitted his report on the Balasore train disaster, a CBI inquiry is announced. This is nothing but headlines management having failed to meet deadlines”.



2016 Kanpur accident

Mr. Ramesh also raised the issue of the 2016 Kanpur rail accident in which 150 lives were lost, and pointed out how National Investigation Agency (NIA) was yet to come out with its report.


Giving the chronology, he said, “1. Nov 20, 2016: Indore-Patna Express derails near Kanpur. Over 150 people lose their lives. 2. Jan 23, 2017: Then Railway Minister Suresh Prabhu writes to Union Home Minister asking for NIA probe into this accident. 3. Feb 24, 2017: PM says Kanpur train accident is a conspiracy. 4. Oct 21, 2018: Newspapers report NIA will not file any chargesheet in the derailment. 5: June 6, 2023: Still no official news on NIA final report on Kanpur derailment. Zero accountability!”


Mr. Shrinate said the NIA had not filed a chargesheet either in the 2016 rail accident nor in the one in Kuneru in Andhra Pradesh in which almost 40 people died. “The very basic question is why should premium agencies like the CBI and NIA be roped into this because this is not their area of expertise. Why should the CRS not probe this accident. Why is the CRS being restricted to probe only 8-10% rail accidents that have happened,” she asked.





‘Railways, Lifeline of India’s Economy, is in ICU’

Rashme Sehgal | 11 Jun 2023

Politics

India

Retired Indian Railways chief engineer Alok Kumar Verma says fixing accountability after accidents is essential, for grievous tragedies can’t just be forgotten.

‘Railways, Lifeline of India’s Economy, is in ICU’

Image Courtesy: Wikimedia Commons


Former Indian Railways chief engineer Alok Kumar Verma speaks to independent journalist Rashme Sehgal about the accident involving three trains in Odisha’s Balasore on June 2, which killed over 280 people. They discuss the decline in the performance and safety standards of the Indian Railways and the lack of accountability after accidents. Verma holds the Railway Board responsible for not standing up to the whims of the political class, which has skewed its priorities—a service millions need is neglected, while exclusive trains that will cater to the wealthy garner massive funding—edited excerpts from an interview.


Rashme Sehgal: A dissenting note by AK Mahanta, a senior engineer, disputes the stand of four other members of a panel that examined reasons for the recent train accident in Odisha. What is your reaction to this?


Alok Kumar Verma: It is a standard and mandatory procedure in the Indian Railways, after an accident, for senior supervisors to rush to inspect the site. They are required to prepare a joint note on the possible causes of the accident. The supervisors of tracks, signalling, and operations, and the station master and locomotive inspector prepare a joint note on what they believe were the possible causes of the accident. It is a mandatory procedure, and it is also common practice to give a dissenting note. Based on the datalogger report, Mahanta believed the signal was green for the Coromandel Express to take the main line, not the loop line. There is nothing unusual about a dissenting note.


RS: How does the datalogger system work?


AKV: It is like the black box in an aeroplane. It throws light on the railway signalling system and records every event, such as whether the signals have been turned on or not. It records everything automatically and is used to generate reports. It is a very important device.


RS: There are suggestions that the signalling process was tampered with, leading to the Odisha accident.


AKV: The entire investigation should have been left to the Commissioner of Railway Safety (CRS), the statutory authority, to prepare a report on what caused the accident.


RS: But rumours of sabotage with signalling were triggered by the Minister of Railways Ashwini Vaishnaw.


AKV: It was such a major accident that people got nervous and lost their heads. I cannot explain why the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) was called in to investigate the accident because, let me be very clear, the CBI has no competence to conduct such an enquiry. But this is something the minister concerned and the government want. Their [enquiry] can be seen as a side act because the government has not revealed why they believed there was sabotage. The CRS must complete its enquiry report, which should be put before the public and Parliament.


Let me give you an earlier example of the accident near Kanpur in November 2016, where 150 people died. The Railway Board and the then-minister said tampering caused the accident. The National Investigative Agency (NIA) was asked to investigate, and one and a half years later, it dropped all charges.


Or take the accident that occurred in Khatauli near Muzaffarnagar in August 2017 that left 23 people dead. The track inspector was not getting time to block the traffic on the tracks. He started maintenance work because he believed the tracks were becoming unsafe. He put up red flags, but the driver of the Kalinga Utkal Express, coming at great speed, did not stop the train resulting in the derailment.


RS: Has there been no learning curve in the Indian Railways following these accidents?


AKV: The CRS looks at the immediate cause of the accident, but behind these are systemic causes that need to be urgently addressed. For every accident, there are numerous near misses and near collisions. It is time the CRS should go into the root causes of why these are taking place.


The problem is that accountability is missing in our country, and the Railways are no exception. Who has been held responsible for these accidents? What action has been taken against them?


RS: Is it the speed of trains that causes accidents?


AKV: We do not have fast trains. In fact, we have amongst the slowest trains in the world, yet we have catastrophic accidents. Maintenance work is being compromised. Our station officers and other staffers are overworked. Overcrowding in our general and sleeper compartments is another major problem, and this increases fatalities. In case of difficulties, extracting the survivors and the deceased becomes challenging.


In the Balasore accident, the Bengaluru-Howrah train was more than two hours behind time. This indicates the chaotic conditions under which the staff is working. Trains running late means the entire scheduling is upset. Everyone has to do extra work. It creates a lot of instability in the system.


RS: What could be the other reasons for such an accident, from your experience?


AKV: The interlocking system of the Railways is robust, but there is a possibility of problems with the signalling and the interlocking, as the joint note says. By interlocking, we mean that the signal will not turn green unless the pass (to allow a train to move ahead) is appropriately sent. The Coromandel Express train was to run through, but the signal was set for the loop line. This indicates a failure of the system. There was some malfunctioning in the interlocking system, and, most probably, it was not attended to in a proper manner. It was defective. Repairs were not done correctly, and so it did not work. This indicates there could have been some mishandling during maintenance work. The government is claiming this malfunctioning was due to external interference. The key question is why the interlocking was not working.


RS: Could the Coromandel Express have been informed of this?


AKV: Station masters have walkie-talkies, as do locomotive drivers. Red flags should have been put out. Putting up red refractive lights is also a standard procedure when a signal is not functioning. But I contend that this is indicative of a systemic failure in the Railways, which are functioning at 125% to 150% of their capacity, whereas a standard procedure is that for a system to perform, it should be functioning at between 70 % to 90% capacity--as is the case with railways around the world.


Otherwise, shortcuts are adopted, which is exactly what happened in Khatauli in 2017. The track engineer was unable to repair the tracks. He was not being given a traffic block, so he put up red flags [to warn oncoming trains] and started doing his work. He should not have agreed to undertake repairs. But in Balasore, they did not put up even red lights--signal lamps with refractors--that make them visible to train drivers from one kilometre away.


RS: A Comptroller and Auditor General (CAG) report from barely two years ago pointed to several shortcomings in the Railways of the kind you mention. How serious are these reports?


AKV: CAG reports have pointed out many limitations, but their primary job is to look into the accounts; they are not a technical [rail] authority. Their audit reports do not speak about congestion on our railway tracks. Nor do they refer to their lack of maintenance. What action have they or any other body taken on the large number of accidents during the last 25 years, or on the key issue of fixing accountability? People should get jailed for criminal negligence. The 2016 and 2017 accidents in Khatauli and Kanpur are recent accidents. People should not be allowed to forget them.


RS: Let us discuss our system for rail safety again. What is the procedure like?


AKV: In our system, the CRS and nine commissioners looking at different regions are concerned with the safe running of trains. It is for the CRS to pursue matters and to fix responsibility. It should also monitor the decisions of the Railway Board and ensure they comply with its decisions as far as safety is concerned.


For example, in the North East, the railways opened a new passenger line between Lumding to Silchar in late 2015 after converting it to broad gauge. This was done without adequately studying ground conditions or preparing proper alignments. The Railway Board should have also done an accurate survey before opening the track. I was chief railway engineer then and ordered the line shut for some time because frequent landslides were blocking the tracks and because of very heavy rainfall. The general manager overruled my decision, and two back-to-back derailments followed within three days. Why was no responsibility fixed? Why was the track allowed to open? Accidents happen because of systemic problems.


RS: The situation seems quite grim from what you say.


AKV: The railways are in the ICU. We must not forget the railways are the lifeline of a nation’s economy and social life. Barely 2% of our population can afford to travel by car or plane. Travelling long distances by car is hardly viable. After 2005, the railways were unable to meet traffic demands, and if we look at the railway’s charts, there is hardly any passenger growth after this year. The railways should grow at 5% to 10%, as between 1990-2000. These were very good years for us, but after the Covid-19 pandemic, both passenger and freight traffic declined.


RS: What factors should be considered when boosting investment in transport infrastructure?


AKV: We are building expensive expressways at a phenomenal rate, and the airlines and air traffic are growing at 10% too, but the most climate and environment-friendly means of transport, the railways, have been neglected, which is very tragic. It is because of misplaced priorities.


RS: What could explain this skew in priorities?


AKV: The answer is very simple. Automobile makers, oil companies and airlines comprise very powerful lobbies. In China, the railways are robust and have made tremendous strides. There, even the affluent prefer to travel by rail. If train travel offers safety and comfort, why will people travel by air or car?


These lobbies worked against the United States and Europe railways during the 50s, 60s, and 70s. Only after the Arab-Israeli war in 1972, when the oil prices shot up, did the European nations awaken and start massive investments in the railways. These are historical facts.


Airlines, automobile, and oil companies are privately owned, but railways cannot grow without government support. The question the nation needs to ask the government is why it and the Railway Board are not paying attention to congestion on our main trunk routes from Delhi to Chennai, Delhi to Mumbai and Delhi to Kolkata. Just on these routes, congestion exceeds 125% to 150%.


RS: Surely Indian Railways must push for decongestion on the main routes and demand more lines along them.


AKV: I agree. The Railway Board is not projecting its requirements. Take the bullet train [coming up] between Mumbai and Ahmedabad. Its costs are astronomical and double that of a broad gauge line. We are spending Rs 2 lakh crore on building a 500 km stand-alone line, which other trains will not use because they run on broad gauge. At the cost of Rs 7 lakh crore, we could have upgraded 15,000 kilometres of our main trunk routes and removed all bottlenecks. We have chosen to spend thousands of crores on a stand-alone bullet train, whereas this money could have been used to upgrade thousands of kilometres of track millions of commuters use. The Railway Boards are at fault for subsidising such a project because those who can afford bullet train travel are a class who can easily afford air tickets. They should have put their foot down and not allowed it.


It is the same with our Vande Bharat trains on which Rs 60,000 crore are being spent. They cost double that of a Shatabdi but will save only 10-15 minutes of travel time. That is because our tracks do not allow fast travel. We should have focused on adding more trains like the Coromandel Express.


We need to start building new lines and upgrade our current lines. Sadly, this has not happened though this problem has existed for 10 to 20 years. Congestion and safety concerns should be the key, as also giving time to necessary maintenance work. Note that the accident rate in our country is at par with [developing nations like] Pakistan, The Congo or Tanzania, but no accident of such magnitude as Balasore has occurred in those nations.


Sunday, June 11, 2023

In Odisha Train Tragedy, Twisted Facts And Narratives Fed To The Vulnerable

*In Odisha Train Tragedy, Twisted Facts And Narratives Fed To The Vulnerable*

Immediately after the Odisha train tragedy, when the minds were the most vulnerable, why was an attempt made to feed the conspiracy theory angle?

Photographs captured at the site of the recent train accident in Odisha’s Balasore district tell multiple tales of tragedy. A trigger warning.

A temple was touted as a mosque; a process of ‘othering’ began soon after; and, sabotage permeated the media, WhatsApp and everything else. But for now, we must give dignity to the dead

Apoorvanand

UPDATED: 09 JUN 2023 5:23 PM

Hindu minds are under attack. They are being assaulted relentlessly, 24x7, by TV channels, You­Tubers, print media and other social media platforms. They are not necessarily connected with each other, nor are they acting under a central command, but what they are doing separately, independent of each other, in a decentralised manner, is driven by a common objective—to fill Hindu minds with hatred for Muslims and Christians, scare them into a state where they feel being under threat from these communities and also with a sense of historical and cultural victimhood. It also aims to give them a sense of supremacy which is not properly recognised by many Hindus who are lambasted as left liberals or seculars. No occasion is spared.

Take for example the news of the train accident near Balasore in Odisha. It sent shockwaves across India and also abroad. The first normal human reaction was silence. The sheer numbers and the freak nature of the accident left people stunned. But, I am wrong. Not all in our country have remained normal human beings.

Immediately after the accident, posts started circulating on different platforms of social media which indicated that there were conspiracies behind the accident. One of the posts said that it could not be a coincidence that it was a Friday, another post cropped a photograph of a religious place near the site of the accident, calling it a mosque, indicating that there must be a connection between this ‘mosque’ and the accident. It was later discovered by fact-checkers like Md Zubair that the structure was actually an ISCON temple and not a mosque. But the handle which had posted it brazed it out adding further that the areas near the accident site were populated by Rohingyas.

Another post said that the station master was a Muslim and had fled after the accident. Again, the lie was busted. The station manager was a Hindu and he was very much there after the accident. Another handle talked about the possibility of the accident being a part of “Train Jihad”. There were other posts made saying that it could not be a coincidence that it happened when Rahul Gandhi was in the USA. It gave the opposition leader a handle to attack the government.

Taking Sides? A collage of screengrabs from different television channels “probing” the Odisha train tragedy

All this was being done when people were trying to make sense of the accident. These suggestions were bombarded when minds were the most vulnerable, receptive to conspiracy theories. It gave them a quick answer to their questions and put their minds at ease. These posts suggested that it was a planned thing, a conspiracy. A mosque, a Muslim station master, Friday—all tropes which fitted with a Hindu mind which has already been so oriented as to see everything from a conspiratorial angle. This mind has been conditioned in a way that it is ready to believe any theory which has Muslims as conspirators and perpetrators of violence.

A Hindu mind has been manufactured which looks at this government as its saviour. It is not only guarding the Hindus from their enemies but it is also undoing the cultural injustice done to it, by aliens, mainly Muslims. It is recovering India for the Hindus. Demolition of the Babri Mosque was not enough, getting the land on which a Ram Temple stood in the imagination of Hindus before it was destroyed to erect a mosque on it was crucial. This government achieved it, something which had not been done for centuries.

Similarly, the reconfiguration of Varanasi is aimed at restoring its cultural primacy in India and the recent move, aided by the courts to make the Gyanvapi Mosque available to the Hindus, are seen as another step in getting mosques reconverted into temples that they were originally, as Hindus are persuaded to believe.

Immediately After The Odisha Accident, Posts Started Circulating On Different Social Media Platforms Which Indicated That There Were Conspiracies Behind The Accident.

These are civilisational tasks which would take time and for which the mundane and material things can and should wait. Those prioritising these material things over civilisational or cultural are seen as saboteurs who want to wreck this great project. That is one reason, sections of people who want the government to be made accountable and who want their rights are seen as selfish, who are creating obstacles in the oath of this government and diverting its attention from the main task, which is to turn India into a Hindu Rashtra.

Enemies have been identified and also labelled. Or, they had already been named by the founders of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), the parent body of the present ruling party, the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). Enemies of the Hindu Rashtra are Muslims, Christians and communists. Now communists have a fancier name, urban naxal or Maoist. Muslims need not be called Muslims, they are terrorists, outsiders, intruders, etc. The charge of conversion can stick to Christians.

Before this train accident, we have seen the agitation of the women wrestlers being defamed. They were not even agitating against the government. They demanded action against an individual blamed by them for sexually harassing them. But the very act of demanding justice for oneself is now seen as a nefarious design to disturb the government which is busy with a more serious work—of transformation of the country into a true Hindu Rashtra.

That is the reason why these women wrestlers, Hindus themselves and at one point in time (and who knows even now) supporters of the politics of this government insisted on having their rights, they were attacked. They were defamed as being misled by the opponents of this regime, of being infantile being driven by some anti-national elements sitting behind the curtain.

No one is seen as an independent mind. Farmers cannot think on their own, for themselves, nor can the players or workers or students. The idea of an independent mind is unthinkable for the politics of Hindutva. There is no individuality either. Everyone has to be essentially a representative of some vested interest group. Everything is a conspiracy. Some of it aimed at wresting back power from the hands of the Hindus which they managed to get in 2014 after waiting for centuries.

That is why the farmers’ movement was seen with suspicion in the so-called Hindi-speaking areas. Since the majority of the farmers were Sikhs, it was easy for the BJP, again aided by the bug media, to paint it as a Khalistani conspiracy in which Islamists and Urban Naxals were also involved.

The Biggest Loss That The Nation Has Suffered In These Eight Years Is This—We As A Society Are Losing The Sense Of Rights, The Sense Of Knowledge, The Sense Of Justice.

So, if a Muslim man marries a Hindu woman, he does it on behalf of the whole of his religious community, not out of love for the woman but to use her to expand the Muslim population with the ultimate objective of overwhelming the Hindus. Similarly, if a Muslim is involved in some violent act in which the target is a Hindu, it is again not an individual crime. It is being committed with the sanction of the whole community for which it must be punished. After an alleged crime by a Muslim in Uttarakhand, posters went up everywhere, a Mahapanchayat announced asking Muslims to leave villages and shut their business.

Muslims, of course, in this whole scheme are existentially a conspiracy against the kind of Hindu India that is being built. So, their grievance against the CAA was met with brute force, supported by Hindus in general. It was impossible that Muslim women could start a protest, organise it and lead it. Women are not seen as thinking minds and Muslim women could only be a cover for the ever-violent Muslim men conspiring against Hindus.

A round-the-clock propaganda tapping the basest instincts and appealing to the biases being carried by Hindus against Muslims and Christians has led to a situation in which violence against them is being seen as legitimate.

This Hindu mind is also losing the ability to recognise the pain of others. These others can also be Hindus. The other is now one who speaks for herself, for her rights and asks questions from the government. For example, migrant labourers who had to walk hundreds of miles during the pandemic were seen as irritants; those who were creating trouble for this government. Similarly, those criticising the government after demonetisation were attacked for being selfish who could not see the larger good that the Modi government had in mind while taking such momentous step. Before them, a vicious campaign against Jawaharlal Nehru University and Delhi University was unleashed calling them dens for terrorists. Students and teachers were attacked for wasting the tax payers’ money.

As said, all this is a result of a multi-pronged assault on the minds of the Hindus. It has caused cognitive damage due to which these Hindus fail to comprehend the reality before their eyes. They did see people suffering and dying during the pandemic, the mess that was created by the sudden announcement of the lockdown but could not see it as a result of the policies of the government.

This mass which now cannot see but un-sees, has lost the ability to empathise with others and has lost the sense of solidarity. How can students stand with the farmers? Why should artists speak for Muslims? Why is the Opposition joining the fighting wrestlers? If you stand in solidarity with people who are not from your community or do not belong to your interest group, there must be something wrong with your act, you must be part of some conspiracy. You must have been paid or you must be part of an anti-India gang. International solidarities are out of the question. So, when Rihanna spoke for the farmers of India, it was alleged that she was paid millions to do that.

This is what we see happening now after the train accident in Odisha is deemed as an act which is aimed at weakening the government. The hate machine through its campaign has created an impression in the minds of lakhs of Hindus that it could be an act of sabotage involving Muslims. Yes, it has been fact-checked and proved to be a lie, but this clarification only cements the suspicion in the minds of this vulnerable mass. Why it is being fact-checked at all? Who is doing it? Are they not the same people who have been fact-checking and proving that this government has been lying in all crucial matters? So, they must not be trusted.

The biggest loss that the nation has suffered in these eight years is this—we as a society are losing the sense of rights, the sense of knowledge, the sense of justice. A time will come when the process of our cognitive recovery will start but now is not that time.

(Views expressed are personal)

(This appeared in the print as 'Twisting Facts And Narratives')

Apoorvanand is a teacher and writer

ISF furious with CPI(M)’s report on Bengal Assembly poll results

ISF furious with CPI(M)’s report on Bengal Assembly poll results

The Indian Secular Front (ISF) is furious with its alliance partner the CPI(M) for stating in its organisational report that the party is yet to solidify its secular image and has not yet been able to shed off the public perception that it is a minority organisation.

The fact that the report questioned joining forces with the ISF and Congress and forming the Sanjukta Morcha has also not gone down well with the ISF.

“What do we have to do to prove ourselves secular? They (CPIM) should tell us then,” said lone ISF MLA Naushad Siddiqui. He is the only Sanjukta Morcha candidate who emerged victorious in the last West Bengal Assembly election.

He also stated that if the CPI(M) thinks that the Sanjukta Morcha faced defeat because of the ISF then they should tell on what basis they are making such a claim. 

“They (CPIM) are a big party and hence it takes time to prepare their organisational report consisting of analysis starting from the booth level to the state committee,” said Siddiqui.

He also said that the ISF also has its own analysis of the Assembly election results. However, Siddiqui said that the ISF will continue to take part in joint agitations with the CPI(M).


Aligning with Abbas Siddiqui’s ISF was wrong: CPI (M) Central Committee

‘Despite mobilising big struggles successfully, there has been a decline in the party’s mass base since 2008’

August 13, 2021 09:06 pm | Updated August 14, 2021 07:47 am IST - New Delhi:

Sobhana K  NairSOBHANA K. NAIR

In a post poll analysis of its defeat in the West Bengal polls, the Communist Party of India-Marxist’s (CPI-M) Central Committee (CC) conceded that it had been a mistake to align with Abbas Siddiqui’s newly formed Indian Secular Front (ISF). Despite “the secular nature of programme and candidates fielded, emphasising on candidates from marginalised sections could not completely erase the image of it being a Muslim minority outfit”, the party noted.

This is for the first time in independent India that no Communist was elected to the Bengal State Assembly.

The Central Committee is the highest decision-making body of the CPI(M). Following its meeting held on August 6-8, the party prepared a report with a detailed analysis of the Assembly elections in West Bengal, Kerala, Tamil Nadu, Assam and Puducherry.

The CC indicted the West Bengal unit of the party for the formation of the Sanjukta Morcha — a third front comprising the Left parties, the Congress, and Furfura Sharif’s patron Abbas Siddiqui’s newly formed Indian Secular Front. The party said: “The Central Committee had decided that the Party can have electoral adjustments with others to maximise the pooling of anti-BJP (Bharatiya Janata Party), anti-TMC (Trinamool Congress) votes. But during the course of the campaign the seat adjustments with the Congress Party and the Indian Secular Front (ISF) were projected under the terminology of Sanjukta Morcha as a United Front calling for an alternative government. This was wrong and not in consonance with the CC understanding,” the party said.

This third front, it noted, was not cohesive since the Congress party had largely disowned the ISF. “Irrespective of the secular nature of its programme and candidates fielded, emphasising on candidates from marginalised sections could not completely erase the image of it being a Muslim minority outfit. Both these factors affected the cohesiveness of this electoral understanding,” the CC noted.

While Sanjkuta Morcha, the CC said, cannot be a permanent structure in the forthcoming Assembly by-elections or local body elections, an electoral understanding with the anti-TMC, anti-BJP secular forces can continue.

The CC said that the review of these results cannot be a one-time exercise but has to be a continuous, serious, self-critical introspection. The defeat of the BJP, though, does offer solace. The party’s politburo, in an analysis soon after the results on May 2, had concluded that polarisation between the TMC and the BJP was the main reason for the Left’s defeat in the State. The CC warned that the BJP’s emergence as the main Opposition party in Bengal is “a dangerous signal for the future”.

The CPI(M) contested 138 seats and got 4.73% of the votes. The Sanjukta Morcha secured 9.9% of the votes. Of this, the Left Front got 5.6% of the votes, the Congress got 2.3%, and the ISF got 1.38%.

Review of Assembly Elections

Wednesday, August 11, 2021

PDF icon 2021-august-assemblies-election-review-cc.pdf

Review of the Assembly Elections in Kerala, West Bengal,

Tamilnadu & Puducherry and Assam

(Adopted at the Central Committee Meeting held on August 06-08, 2021)


Overall Results: Setback for BJP : The results of this round of Assembly elections is a setback for the BJP in Kerala, Tamilnadu and West Bengal.  In Assam, it managed to retain its government with a razor thin difference in the vote share of 0.78 per cent more than the opposition `Mahajot’.  Despite all its efforts to sharpen communal polarization, spending unprecedented amounts of money, aggressively misusing Central agencies and manipulating the electoral apparatus, intimidating and threatening opposition parties and its leaders, the BJP and its allies failed to get the people’s support that they sought and have been decisively defeated in Kerala, West Bengal and Tamilnadu.


These results create opportunities to further strengthen people’s movements and struggles in the country to safeguard the secular democratic character of the Indian Republic as laid down by the Constitution, which is under severe assault by the BJP Central government.  This provides the opportunity for vastly strengthening people’s struggles and popular movements on pandemic related life and death concerns of the people and for better livelihood conditions.


Kerala


In these elections, the LDF under the leadership of the CPI(M) registered a historic victory.  That an incumbent state government has been reelected is a development that has not happened for more than four decades in the state.  The LDF’s performance is better than in the last Assembly elections. This shows the increase in people’s acceptance of the LDF government.  The people of Kerala gave this mandate to the LDF on the performance of the previous government, the alternative policies pursued as opposed to the disastrous policies pursued by the Central government, the manner in which severe natural calamities were handled, the exemplary manner of tackling the pandemic and providing relief to all the affected sections along with the welfare measures undertaken in the last five years. 


The LDF has won the people’s mandate by vigorously countering the UDF and BJP’s disruptive policies of heaping false allegations of corruption on the Chief Minister and the government.  The people appreciated the LDF government as being the bulwark of secularism and the communally harmonious character of Kerala society.  The firm stand of the LDF government against the CAA and other Hindutva measures of the BJP-RSS increased support amongst the minorities and people at large.


These elections saw the unprecedented use of the Central agencies like ED and CBI to target the Chief Minister and the government on false charges connected with the gold smuggling case and extending it to a whole gamut of government policies.  The rightwing media launched a full-fledged campaign against the LDF government. The LDF strongly countered these moves which were supported by the BJP and UDF. It was the patent falsehood of these vindictive steps that incurred the people’s displeasure. 


LDF which had secured 91 seats in the 2016 elections was able to secure 99 seats this time. While LDF won two-thirds of the seats, CPI(M) along with its independents won 67 seats. It was the first time that any political party in Kerala secured 67 seats in the history of elections in Kerala. This is also the election in which all sections of society –  the working class, peasantry, agricultural labourers, youth, students, backward sections, dalits, adivasis, religious minorities, middle class and women – all have extended support to the LDF. That we could ensure the support of large sections of people beyond the Party is the result of our organizational setup's ability to convey the good work of the Government to the people. The Congress-led UDF's attempt to once again raise controversial issues like the Sabarimala women entry issue, which it had emotionally utilized during Lok Sabha elections, was rejected by the people this time.

    

LDF’s Seat Sharing: This was an election after the expansion of the LDF with Kerala Congress (M) and others joining. For that reason, it became necessary to share some seats which were contested by the constituents of LDF with the new constituent parties. Since all constituent parties co-operated, it was possible to make seat-sharing satisfactorily. That the LDF worked in the election with no discontent gave strength to the election work.


Of the 99 seats won by the LDF, the Party-wise break-up is as follows: CPI(M) – 67 (61+6 independents), CPI – 15, Kerala Congress (M) – 5, JD (S) – 2, NCP – 2, Democratic Kerala Congress – 1, LJD – 1, INL – 1, Congress (S) – 1, RSP (Leninist) – 1.


Selection of Party Candidates: The state committee took the bold decision that comrades who have contested twice consecutively from the same constituency need not be fielded again.  The understanding was that comrades with long legislative and ministerial experience can be shifted for organizational and other responsibilities.  Similarly, those doing organizational work for a long time can be given legislative responsibilities.  On this criteria, it was decided that 33 sitting MLAs need not contest and new candidates were put up.  This stand of the Party was appreciated by the  people and the rank and file of the Party.


It may be recalled that the Central Committee in its rectification campaign document of 1998 had recommended fixing of two or three terms for elected representatives.  This has been fully implemented in Kerala with good results. 


Results: LDF votes increased from 87,25,939 (43.35 per cent) in 2016 to 94,07,662 (45.28 per cent) in 2021. UDF votes in 2016 78,08,743 (38.79 per cent) increased to 81,85,270 (39.49 per cent) in 2021. BJP votes in 2016 viz 30,20,886 (15.01 per cent) got reduced to 25,92,139 (12.47 per cent) in 2021. UDF had a slight increase in votes mainly because a portion of BJP votes were transferred to UDF. In 2016 elections LDF secured 4.5 per cent (9,17,194) more votes than UDF. This time it increased to 6.14 per cent (12,12,182) votes.


2016 Assembly 2021 Assembly

LDF 43.35 45.28

UDF 38.79 39.49

BJP 15.01 12.47


LDF secured more seats than the UDF in 11 districts. LDF votes increased in 12 districts. UDF secured less votes in 5 districts. LDF votes declined in Kollam district and Ernakulam district.


UDF got more seats than us in Ernakulam with 9 out of 14, in Malappuram with 12 out of 16 and 2 out of 3 in Wayanad. BJP lost its lone seat in Nemom which LDF won.


All constituent parties in LDF have representation in Assembly this time. 9 out of 10 women elected to the Assembly are LDF candidates. Last time the number was 8. LDF secured 13 out of 14 seats for scheduled castes, 1 out of 2 seats for scheduled tribes. Among them 9 are CPI(M) candidates.  However, the number of women candidates put up by the Party is still inadequate.


The LDF was able to defeat the BJP in the sole seat it held in the Assembly. From 2016, BJP votes are slightly above 15 per cent. This time it got reduced to 12.7 per cent. BJP votes had been gradually increasing from 2006 onwards. The decrease in votes it secured this time is important in the present national situation. BJP had used all the influence of the Central Government and huge money.


Majority of the basic classes voted for LDF. Aid provided by the Government to workers in traditional industries and other relief measures like distribution of food kits etc were beneficial. Peasants and agricultural workers supported the LDF. Workers in the unorganized sectors supported in general. There was no negative trend towards the LDF from the organized sector workers. Large sections of the middle class supported us. All these factors contributed to the big victory.


Main Factors that Ensured LDF Victory:


(i) A clear political line which highlighted our fight against the BJP-RSS danger and exposed the Congress-Led UDF’s opportunist collaboration with BJP.

(ii) Expansion of LDF with entry of Kerala Congress (M) and LJD.

(iii) Exemplary work of LDF Government which made qualitative changes in matters related to the life of people.

(iv) Proper execution of social security programmes.

(v) Protection given to all sectors of people on the firm foundation of religious amity. There was no anti-incumbency factor during the election. Popular vote got turned into vote for development.


Certain Concerns: While noting these favorable factors, we should not ignore the fact that our voting percentage in 2021 is less than our voting percentage in 2006. We have to seriously consider the reasons for this and to make efforts to expand our influence. We have to identify all factors that hinder our efforts to get more acceptability among people and take measures to find solutions. We have to attract ordinary people who have rallied behind UDF and BJP towards us and try to increase our mass influence. Appropriate corrective steps are necessary in certain areas where we lag behind.


It has to be noted that BJP has come in second place in nine constituencies. BJP is in second place for some time in the linguistic  minority constituencies in Kasargode district. This time also BJP votes were transferred to UDF in many places. We have to pay more attention to the constituencies where BJP has reached second place.


The state committee review notes that while our votes increased in 12 districts compared to 2011, the LDF vote decreased in Kollam and Ernakulam districts.  This should be specially examined, especially Kollam district as it is a strong base of the Left and working class movement, and necessary steps taken.


Correct Parliamentary Deviations


As a Party constantly engaging in parliamentary/legislative activities, we have to be on guard against parliamentary deviations and comrades becoming prey to parliamentary illusions and hankering for positions.  This problem exists as pointed out in rectification documents of Kerala state committee and Central Committee at various times.


During this election too, certain wrong tendencies were seen in connection with candidature in two constituencies where public protests were held by Party members.  This was harmful to the Party.  In a few places, factionalism affected the election campaign.  Such trends should be curbed and firm corrective measures taken.  The Party must conduct a rectification campaign to counter such deviations.


Organisational Steps


The state election review has pointed out some organizational steps to strengthen the Party.  Taking these into account, the following are to be undertaken:


(i) Improving the quality of Party members by raising their political-organisational level, given the big expansion of Party membership.

(ii) Large sections of people have come closer to the Party in the course of the election.  Steps to draw them closer to the Party.

(iii) New sections, including middle class, are coming to the Party in Muslim areas.  Steps to recruit the best among them as Party members and build Party in those areas. Also attention to recruiting more members from amongst the Christian community.

(iv) Increasing awareness of Party members and units about the political-ideological design of the Hindutva forces.


UDF After Elections


The strength of the Congress-led UDF should be recognized though we have been able to make advance in the election. The UDF vote share has actually increased slightly compared to the 2016 Assembly elections.  It was 38.8 per cent in 2016 and it is 39.4 per cent now. Muslim League, with its big influence among the Muslim community, is giving strong support to the UDF. The anti-Communist media in Kerala is also providing strong support to the UDF. UDF also commands considerable influence among the upper middle classes.


The UDF had an understanding with Muslim fundamentalists and at the same time dealt with the BJP for vote transfer.  They will continue their efforts in new form.  The Party should continue efforts to weaken UDF further by seeking to attract the masses following them and by expanding our base among the basic classes.


The Position of BJP


BJP in trying to utilize the power at the Centre to sharpen communal polarization and expand their influence for the past few years. The power at the Centre enables them to spend money in a substantial way. Some social forces within Hindu religion are shifting their allegiance to BJP. However, compared to the previous elections, BJP’s vote share declined substantially in this election. They lost their representation in the Assembly. The decline of the vote share of the BJP should not lead us to the conclusion that BJP has weakened substantially.


The poor people who have been supporting BJP are moving away from them. There should be efforts to see that such sections do not move to UDF. The efforts of the BJP to penetrate among sections under our influence must be checked.  There should be careful examination of the new spheres of influence of the BJP and corrective measures adopted.


New Responsibilities of the Party


The progressive force in India have considerable expectations from the LDF government. In the current national scenario, the performance of the present LDF government in pursuing alternative policies against BJP and their Hindutva communal extremist positions and globalization policies, will provide the necessary stimulus to the growing people’s struggles.


The LDF vote share in terms of numbers and percentage has increased compared to the previous elections. However, one should consider seriously the fact that even after KC(M) and LJD joining the front and the better performance of the government and goodwill of the people towards the LDF government, the vote share has increased only by 1.93 per cent. We have not been able to reach the voting percentage of 48.81 per cent we got in 2006 neither in 2016 nor in 2021 election.


The continuance in government for a second term is a new experience and brings forth more responsibilities.  At the government level, economic development has to be sustained in the face of adverse circumstances; production in agriculture and industrial spheres improved. There has been a rightward shift in Kerala society and pernicious trends are manifesting themselves such as dowry deaths, attacks on women, obscurantism and retrograde social customs.  The Party and progressive forces have to counter these trends. Finally, concrete steps must be taken to heighten the political-ideological level of the Party members which alone will help us to discharge our responsibilities in the new situation. 


Numerous cadres are holding responsibilities in Cabinet, as MLAs, in local bodies and cooperative sectors.  Our approach and behaviour should earn the confidence of the people.  We must eschew all wrong practices such as bureaucratism, arrogance and corrupt practices.  The Party and class and mass organisations should function independently and not become appendages of the government and dependent on the administration.  The cadres should be humble and adopt a responsible approach to the people.


The CPI(M) and LDF in Kerala should be able to blaze a new path which will inspire all the Left and democratic forces in the country to further endeavors. 


West Bengal


The results in these assembly elections in West Bengal are devastating. Since 1946 the Communists never faced such a disastrous result. This is for the first time in independent India that no Communist was elected to the state assembly.


The state leadership has taken the responsibility. A review of these results cannot be a one-time exercise but has to be a continuous serious self-critical introspection. This is because many of the factors that contributed to this dismal performance are those on which the Party had taken decisions in the past, both political and organisational, which could not be properly implemented. The reasons for this have to be sharply pinpointed and corrected.


The defeat of the BJP by the people of West Bengal is a salutary factor. The election process continued for over a month with eight phases for 294 assembly seats. 81.77 per cent cast their votes i.e. nearly 6 crores. Trinamool Congress won 213 seats, BJP 77 seats.


The Party along with the Left Front had seat adjustments with the Congress and the Indian Secular Front (ISF). Except for one seat won by the ISF, this combination which was named as Sanjukta Morcha could not win any other seat.


BJP has been defeated despite their high profile aggressive campaign, spending unprecedented amounts of money and the Prime Minister and Home Minister holding election rallies across the state. This aggressive campaign was seen by the people of West Bengal as an affront to their cultural way of life and an attempt to impose Hindutva on Bengal. People saw the TMC as the main vehicle to achieve this defeat of the BJP. Despite our anti-BJP campaign along with the campaign against TMCs ten year rule and politics of terror, people did not consider the Sanjukta Morcha as an alternative.


The 17th Assembly in West Bengal is a polarised one between the TMC and the BJP. The BJP’s emergence as the main opposition party in Bengal is a dangerous signal for the future. These results will naturally strengthen the political bipolarity that emerged during the 2019 Lok Sabha elections where the BJP made substantial gains. The campaign then and since these elections was the projection of a contest between the central government and the state government; the PM and the CM and hence the BJP and the TMC. In the 2019 LS elections, the CPI(M) could not get a majority of votes in any single assembly segment. It was clear that the sharp polarisation between the BJP and the TMC has squeezed out any other political force.


Party state committee in its assessment when the preparations for these assembly elections began had come to the conclusion that the correlation of political forces that emerged from the 2019 elections have not changed. These results confirms this. But the question is why we could not change this political correlation between 2019 and 2021?


CPI(M) contested 138 seats on our symbol. We got only 4.73 per cent of the votes. The Sanjukta Morcha got 9.9 per cent of the votes. Of this the Left Front got 5.6 per cent, the Congress got 2.3 per cent and the ISF 1.38 per cent.


In the 2016 assembly elections, the Left Front won 32 seats. Among these 23 were won by TMC and  9 by the BJP this time. In 2016 the Congress had won 44 seats. Of these in 2021 the TMC won 29 and the BJP the rest of the 15.


The Left Front vote declined by 21.5 compared to 2016. In 2019 Lok Sabha election, Left front polled 7.4 per cent of the vote, this fell to 5.6  per cent in these assembly elections. Due to seat adjustments the number of seats we contested are fewer this time.  In 2021, we contested 138 seats and got 4.73 per cent votes.


Certain Issues


As noted earlier, these results have been shocking. The state leadership has already taken responsibility for this.  Party needs to undertake a serious self-critical introspection. The Central Committee is duty bound to discharge this responsibility.


Following these results, the Polit Bureau after its meeting on May 5, 2021 sent a note to the West Bengal State Committee asking them to look into certain important aspects while undertaking their review. The preliminary review of the state committee addressed these issues contained in the PB note. However, there are certain aspects that need to be more thoroughly addressed. The Central Committee must come to conclusions on these aspects which is essential for unifying the entire party. This is important as the impact of these shocking results in West Bengal is faced by the Party all over the country. Hence the review, though mainly concerns the West Bengal Party unit, is of importance to the Party as a whole.


This is also necessary for another important reason. Party has always maintained that West Bengal is the advanced outpost of the democratic movement in the country. This position has to be retrieved and it can be retrieved on the basis of a collective unified understanding on important aspects.


Sharp Decline in Our Mass Base: The main issue that needs a serious self-critical introspection is that the sharp decline in our mass base and social following that began in 2008 continues. The Party had since then at various levels including the Party Congresses have examined this decline and identified certain reasons that need to be corrected. The Organisational Plenum of the Party also identified detailed measures to be undertaken in order to arrest and reverse this decline. But, however, as these election results show, we have not been successful in implementing these decisions. The process of self-critical introspection on why our Party has not been able to internalize these reviews will hence have to continue and the opportunity of the forthcoming Party Congress should be utilised to identify and set in motion steps to correct and rectify this situation.


During this period since 2008 our Party had to face very severe repression through fascistic attacks. There was resistance against these attacks. Between 2011 and 2018 we have lost 746 comrades. During this period, more than one lakh, two thousand of our Party members, sympathisers were driven away from their homes and Party had to make arrangements for looking after them in the urban areas. More than 1,30,000 of our members and sympathisers are subjected to false cases filed against them and the consequent harassment and intimidation. This situation of terror and violence contributed to demoralisation amongst much of our mass following.


During this period Party and mass organisations have conducted many big struggles, mobilised large number of people for central/state level calls and protest actions. Brigade rallies with the participation of more than 10 lakh people were also organised. Yet the question remains why such mobilisations and actions have not translated into better electoral results or reverse the trend of the decline in our mass base.


The following two aspects, which contributed to our decline in the mass following, have not been properly taken into account in assessing the situation in the state.


Political Rightward Shift: During this period, the RSS expanded rapidly in West Bengal. The number of RSS sakhas as well as an intense communal polarisation propagating the Hindutva agenda had grown significantly. This is part of the countrywide growth of the RSS/BJP particularly since after the 2014 Lok Sabha elections under this Modi government. This led to the consolidation of the Hindutva communal vote bank and the rousing of jingoistic nationalism.


Our 22nd Party Congress political resolution analysed the factors behind the growing rightward political shift as a consequence of the world capitalist crisis. This has become further strengthened with the global Covid pandemic being utilised by right-wing forces for further consolidation. The growth of racism, xenophobia and all sorts of divisive factors are growing globally. This has had its impact in the rise of rabid communalism and polarisation in India. Its impact in Bengal and the extent to which the strength of secularism has been eroded, impacting sections of our mass base must be seriously assessed and countered.  This struggle to combat the communal offensive unleashed by the RSS/BJP has to be met at multiple levels as decided by our Party Congresses, i.e., ideological, political, organizational, cultural levels etc.


Class Changes in our Society: The aggressive pursuit of the neo-liberal reform trajectory on Indian society was an issue that was seriously taken up by the Party Central Committee. Specific commissions were formed by the Central Committee to identify these changes in various sectors and the reports of these commissions were discussed by the Central Committee and on that basis certain organisational decisions were undertaken. The 2015 organisational plenum concretised many such measures.


Concretely, similar exercises by our state committees including West Bengal were undertaken. But the results of such a concrete study on the class shifts taking place within our society and the consequent implications for Party organisation, slogans and tactics in mobilising the people particularly the rural poor who were once the bedrock of our support did not materialise effectively. This weakness has to be addressed urgently. Its impact could be seen in these elections as well where the rural poor, the marginalised sections of our society remained alienated from the Party. This has to be properly addressed and a concrete direction for political-organisational changes must be undertaken.


Sharp Polarisation Between TMC & BJP


After the 2019 17th Lok Sabha elections, where we could not poll a majority vote in any assembly segment, the review noted the rising polarisation between the BJP and the Trinamool. It was decided that all efforts should be made to break this bipolarity. Yet, on the eve of the 2021 assembly elections, the state committee came to the conclusion that despite all the struggles and mobilisations that took place between 2019 and 2021, the political correlation has not changed and remained at what it was in 2019.


The CPI(M) vote share declined from 19.75 per cent in 2016 to 6.28 per cent in 2019, further to 4.73 per cent in 2021.


Situation of a  political bipolarity was strengthening for some years now. This sharpened during and after the 2019 parliamentary elections. Such a BJP-TMC bipolar projection negating any other political/electoral alternative in the state was actively supported and abetted by the corporate media and influential sections of the ruling classes. However, it was wrong to draw the conclusion that there was a collusion between the TMC and BJP to achieve such bipolarity.


It is a fact that the TMC served as the piggyback for the RSS/BJP to get a foothold in Bengal. The TMC’s long alliance with the BJP and it being a part of the NDA and the Union Cabinet under the Vajpayee government cemented this alliance for some years. However, with the BJP’s rise countrywide and its seeking to gain control in all the states of India created new ruptures in this alliance. The rightward shift and the accompanied communal offensive has been on the rise all over the country. In Bengal, this was challenging the TMCs dominance and proceeded to work on the slogan of capturing Bengal.


We had wrongly assessed that the largescale defections from TMC to BJP and their return post elections as a reflection of the collusion between the two in creating a bipolarity in the state. The history of the RSS and its political fronts Jan Sangh in the past and BJP now shows that whichever national or regional party they have aligned with in order to gain access to new areas they ultimately succeeded in weakening, dividing, in some cases like the Socialist Party from mid-1960s onwards, ultimately decimating them subsequently. Many regional parties met with similar experience.  Parties like the AGP in Assam got weakened after aligning with BJP.


The Modi-Shah dispensation has employed a three-pronged strategy against opposition parties: outright monetary inducements for defections and promises of important positions in governments; secondly, using intimidation and threats by enforcement agencies; and finally, by slapping cases and jailing opposition leaders. We have seen how they managed to topple elected governments in Goa, Karnataka, Madhya Pradesh and in the North East. Such activities contributed to growing conflicts between the BJP with some of its oldest allies leaving them like Shiv Sena and Akali Dal.


The BJP government’s attacks on federalism and the rights of the elected state governments led by regional parties; brazen interference through RSS pracharaks appointed as Governors has created conflicts between ruling regional parties and the BJP.


The consequent growing hostility between the BJP and the ruling TMC was underestimated by us. This resulted in diluting sharpness of the anti-BJP campaign and often equating BJP and Trinamool Congress in practice, despite the statements and positions by the Party leading committees pointing out BJP as our principal target. The position of our Party as uncompromising defender of secular democracy opposing the BJP suffered.


The BJP’s open call for a new India and the aggressive campaigns for capturing Bengal have played a big role in contributing to this result of consolidating anti-BJP resistance among the Bengali people.


Over-Estimation of Anti-Incumbency Against TMC: That there was anti-incumbency against the TMC government was correct. This was sharply manifested in the 2019 Lok Sabha election results.


However, what was underestimated was the efforts being made by the TMC to overcome this. At one level there were welfare measures that provided much needed relief to the people. It was a mistake on our part to brush these aside contemptuously by terming them as ‘dole politics’. A section of those alienated from the TMC returned to support it.


Secondly, the personal tirade against the Chief Minister spearheaded by PM Modi and HM Amit Shah generated a degree of sympathy among the people for the TMC likening it to a David v/s Goliath fight. This sympathy was further bolstered with the CM campaigning on a wheelchair. However exaggerated her injuries may have been, this generated empathy particularly among the women voters.


Thirdly, they succeeded in a sort of social engineering targeting specific groups with specific concessions to earn their support.


These factors, which can be clearly seen in retrospect, were not properly taken into account by us.


Land Question: We continued to campaign on the presumption that the Left Front government with its land reforms and other pro-people policies could gather the support of the minorities, Dalits, adivasis and other marginalised sections. The slogan of land as our basis and industrialisation as our future given at the time of the Nandigram developments continued to be used even in this election campaign. In the current situation this slogan was seen by the people as a continuation of land acquisition policy reviving memories of that period which had alienated rural people from the Left Front.  Further, in the current situation of deep agrarian crisis and the ongoing farmers’ struggles for the repeal of the agri-laws and the legal right of MSP, any talk of acquiring land from the peasantry, particularly when they are subjected to the terror of the land mafia, only strengthened the alienation of the peasantry from us.


Identity Politics: The influence of identity politics was underestimated leading to our failure to address these issues in a proper manner. Amongst the three issues the Sachar Committee identified regarding the status and welfare of the minorities – security; equity; identity – our focus was primarily on the first. Even under the Left Front government in the later years the Party had assessed that over emphasis only on the security issue did not meet the aspirations of the minorities. Thanks to the Left Front government, the near four decades of secular harmony without any communal clash or incident was accepted as a ‘given’ by the minorities. Their urge for improved livelihood, employment, etc. largely remained unaddressed. This needs to be corrected and a balanced approach should be worked out. Along with the issue of security, the issues of identity and equity should be taken up as part of class politics and struggles, guarding against falling into the trap of identity politics, dominating over class issues, thus negating classes and class struggle. 


There are specific issues of the Scheduled Castes that must be properly assessed and addressed. Tribal issues, particularly in North Bengal, and the efforts by the BJP and TMC to rouse chauvinism and disrupt the unity of the people must be properly tackled.


Sanjukta Morcha & Alternative Government: The Central Committee had decided that the Party can have electoral adjustments with others to maximise the pooling of anti-BJP, anti-TMC votes. But during the course of the campaign the seat adjustments with the Congress Party and the Indian Secular Front were projected under the terminology of Sanjukta Morcha as a United Front calling for an alternative government. This was wrong and not in consonance with the CC understanding.


The Sanjukta Morcha cannot be any permanent structure or a United Front with a common manifesto or programme. During the elections a joint appeal was issued seeking people’s support for its candidates.


Even this electoral understanding based on seat adjustments did not emerge cohesive with the Congress Party largely disowning the ISF. Irrespective of the secular nature of its programme and candidates fielded, emphasising on candidates from marginalised sections could not completely erase the image of it being a Muslim minority outfit. Both these factors affected the cohesiveness of this electoral understanding.


In the future, on specific issues for joint campaigns and struggles, along with the Left Front other democratic elements must be mobilised. Likewise in the forthcoming assembly by-elections or the local body elections, electoral understanding with anti-TMC, anti-BJP secular forces can continue.


Future Tasks of the Party


Amongst the tasks outlined and undertaken by the Party State Committee, the following need to be underlined.


The overriding sentiment amongst the Bengal people in these elections was to defeat the BJP and its efforts to capture Bengal. Now that, that has been achieved the people’s preoccupation with livelihood concerns will once again rise to dominate. This is the time when politics in terms of championing people’s causes arises. Our Party must be alert and capable in raising these issues, mobilising people on their various concerns, particularly those from the marginalised sections, like Dalits, adivasis, minorities, etc. into actions and struggles.


Organisational Tasks: The strength of such a political leadership through people’s struggle is crucially dependent, as repeatedly analysed by us, on our independent strength and political intervention capacity. All the decisions taken earlier in this direction since after 2008 at all levels of the Party need to be properly reviewed. This is the meaning of continuous self-critical introspection we need to undertake to examine why the earlier decisions could not be properly implemented. These weaknesses must be identified, overcome and all efforts made to  implement the decisions in right earnest.


The organizational position of the Party has been weakening over a long period. We have been trying to streamline and activise the Party on the lines suggested by the Kolkata plenum. However, serious weaknesses persist.


In the current situation, the ideological struggles and campaigns against Hindutva need to be enormously strengthened.  We should not be misled to think that the commitment to secularism among the Bengali people cannot be undermined.  There is a history of the partition and the vicious communal situation that arose then.  The RSS-BJP thrived on reviving the memories of that period to spread the Hindutva campaign.  As noted earlier, the struggles against the growth of Hindutva feelings must be combatted ideologically, politically, organizationally, culturally etc.


There have been defections from the Party at various levels to the TMC and later to the BJP. This shows serious erosion in the political-ideological level in the Party. Weaknesses noted in Party committees and booth committees functioning during the election campaign must be rectified. Steps to check and remedy the situation must be undertaken urgently. Steps to protect our cadres and defend our support base against the continuous attacks by TMC must be strengthened.


The need is to activate our mass organisations, ensuring their independent functioning and maintaining the balanced relationship between the mass organisations and the Party as decided in CC resolutions.


Efforts should be made to consolidate the Left Front and its allies. On this basis we should work for strengthening broader unity of forces on common agreed issues in joint actions and struggles.


This post-election period in Bengal is, as noted earlier, a period of great potential for intensifying class and people’s popular struggles on issues vital for existence and better life. This is a time for us to be prepared with confidence to launch and lead these people’s struggles. Far from demoralisation this is the period for the renewal of class struggles and reenergising our links with the people. The most heartening factor of this election is the participation of the youth, their vitality and vibrancy in the election campaign must be harnessed for the Party’s future.


Tamilnadu & Puducherry


The elections for the Assemblies of Tamilnadu  (234 MLAs) and Puducherry (30 MLAs) along with a parliamentary by-election were held in a single phase on April 6.  The main contest was between the ruling AIADMK-BJP alliance and the DMK-led secular alliance. 


The AIADMK-BJP alliance, after Jayalalithaa’s departure, continued with its high levels of corruption, administrative irregularities, anti-people measures actively supporting the BJP government and its policies at the Centre.  The BJP Central government policies of aggressive implementation of neo-liberal economic policies and reforms, promoting corporate capitalism, large-scale loot of national assets and privatization of public sector enterprises, undermining federalism and the Constitutional rights of elected state government along with aggressively pursuing the Hindutva politics were all supported by the AIADMK.  The CPI(M) conducted big public protests and struggles against all these anti-people, anti-Constitutional measures taken by the BJP Central government.  It was necessary that the AIADMK-BJP alliance be defeated in these Assembly elections and removed from heading the government.


With this understanding, the Party decided to join the DMK-led secular alliance and had seat adjustments.  The DMK-led alliance consists of Congress and DMK,  MDMK, CPI(M), CPI, VCK, MMK, AIML, Kongu Makkal Katchi, Tamizhaga Vaazhvurimai Kaatchi and Forward Bloc. Except the Congress, CPM, CPI, VCK and Muslim League, all other parties contested the elections (15 seats) under DMK's `rising sun’ symbol.


The DMK-led secular alliance won the election and the DMK formed the state government.


DMK Alliance Performance


The DMK-led alliance altogether won 159 seats receiving a total vote of 45.39 per cent (37.7 per cent for the DMK’s `rising sun’ symbol). DMK and its alliance parties contested in 188 seats under the DMK symbol and won 133 seats.  DMK alone had contested 173 seats and won 125.  Allies won 34 out of 61 seats they contested. 


The main factor behind the victory of the DMK-led alliance was the continuous people’s movements against the state government’s policies, corruption, livelihood concerns of the people and combating the efforts of sharpening communal polarization by the BJP.  The minorities, significant section of the middle classes, scheduled castes, civil servants and employees voted for the alliance. 


Though the alliance won, it should be noted that compared to the 2019 Lok Sabha elections, the alliance vote share decreased from 51.46 per cent to 45.39 per cent.  This can partly be explained by the measures the AIADMK state government took after the parliamentary election results such as Pongal relief, farmers’ loan waiver, jewellery loan waiver, 10.5 per cent reservation for Vanniyars etc.  AIADMK invoked caste feelings to mobilise support.  The social background of the Chief Minister was also a favourable factor for them.


 


AIADMK Alliance Performance


These measures benefited the AIADMK alliance to some extent.  As against 30.29 per cent votes it got in the parliamentary elections, it has now received 39.72 per cent.  While the Vanniyar reservation got them some benefit, it also alienated people belonging to other communities. Sections of the scheduled castes were alienated with the name change of Devendrakula Vellelar.  The AIADMK, BJP, PMK and Tamil Maanila Congress contested in an alliance.  The alliance got 39.72 per cent vote while the AIADMK winning 66 seats had a vote share of 33.29 per cent.  The PMK won 5 out of 23 and BJP won 4 out of 20 seats it contested. 


The BJP, winning 4 constituencies, has polled 2.62 per cent vote.  There is a real danger of BJP using this victory to take forward its Hindutva communal politics in the state.  Kamal Haasan’s MNM, which polled 3.72 per cent of votes in Lok Sabha election got only 2.7 per cent votes in this election.


The AIADMK-BJP alliance displayed a massive amount of money power in these elections.  Unprecedented amounts were spent on election campaign, vote gathering mobilizing people for campaign rallies by distributing money to party workers and paying the voters.  This has, to a large extent, corrupted the election process and depoliticized it.


The trend of bipolarity between the DMK and AIADMK, present in the state for decades, continued in these elections as well.  Between themselves, these two parties polled around 70 per cent of the vote.  All efforts to break this bipolarity have not succeeded so far.  With contesting alliances led by both these parties, this trend consolidates. 


CPI(M) Performance


On the basis of our understanding and Central Committee decision to be part of the DMK-led secular alliance, the Party entered into prolonged negotiations with the DMK.


The DMK, while ensuring that alliance parties were necessary for its victory, on the other hand adopted an attitude of reducing the seats for the alliance partners clearly wanting to contest most on its own symbol and win more seats. 


After prolonged arduous talks and negotiations, starting with DMK’s offer of three seats each to all alliance parties (except Congress), it was increased to six for CPI(M), CPI and VCK. Though the Party was unhappy with only six seats that does not reflected our influence, we went along considering the larger implications and the need to defeat the AIADMK-BJP alliance.  Even the choice of these six were not to our satisfaction. Of the shortlisted eight seats we proposed, only three were allocated with no seat in Kanyakumari and Chennai districts. Contesting in these districts may have improved our success rate. 


The Party contested in the following six seats:  Dindigul, Kovilpatti, Kilvelur, Kandarvakottai, Harur and Thiruparankundram.


Of these six constituencies, we won only in two, viz., Kandarvakottai and Kilvelur.   We have lost the remaining four constituencies by a considerable margin. Of the three (from our proposed eight constituencies) given to us, we were unable to ensure a win in two of them, Dindigul and Kovilpatti.


Kilvelur: Our traditional influence in this constituency, the strength of the party and the good work we have done in the past are the reasons for the success. And the fact that the DMK alliance has won with more popular support in the Delta and Central districts has confirmed our success. The fact that the PMK candidate contested in the opposition also helped us win by an extra margin of votes.


Kandarvakottai: The fact that the DMK alliance has won with more popular support in the Delta and Central districts was a strong factor in our success. Here we have earlier won sizeable local body posts and the good work done by our representatives has aided our victory. The fact that the AMMK candidate has garnered more votes has also helped our victory


CPI also won two out of the six it contested.  The VCK, however won four out of the six it contested.


A more thorough review is being conducted by the district committees to understand our loss in Dindigul, Kovilpatti, Thiruparankundram and Harur constituencies.  We had won Dindigul on five occasions earlier, but lost with a margin of 17,000 votes this time.  We had won Harur on four occasions in the past.  In Kovilpatti, the delimitation of the constituency adversely affected our vote.  The entry of Dinakaran in the fray with his money power, amongst other factors, worked to our disadvantage. 


 


Puducherry


As the elections approached, some legislators from Congress and DMK jumped to the BJP. Elections were held under governor's rule after Congress Chief Minister Narayanaswamy resigned. The Congress and the DMK contested as an alliance albeit with strained relations. The seat allocation was reached with Congress 15, DMK 13, CPI and VCK 1 each. Not even a single constituency was allotted to our party. In this situation, we decided to contest in Muthialpet constituency and to support the DMK-Congress alliance in other constituencies. On that understanding election campaign and public meetings were held in Muthialpet constituency. However, we only got 320 votes.


In Mahe Assembly constituency, which falls within the geographical borders of the Kerala state, the LDF usually fields an independent candidate.  In the 2016 election, LDF independent candidate won the election polling 10,797 votes.  However, in this election, the LDF candidate lost by a margin of  300 votes polling 9,444 votes.  Congress won the seat.


Though Congress and DMK formed an alliance they didn't work shoulder to shoulder and hence the electoral task of overthrowing NR Congress BJP combine did not materialize. As a result, the Congress, which contested 15 seats, won 2 seats and the DMK, which contested 13 seats, won only 6 seats.


Since 2016, the BJP Central government was destabilizing the elected government led by the Congress by grossly misusing the office of the Lt. Governor. The Lt. Governor was running a parallel government there and not allowing the elected government to function.


In Puducherry, there is a provision that the Lt. Governor nominates three MLAs who have been given voting rights by the judiciary. In 2016 and 2021, the Lt. Governor nominated BJP people to these three positions, breaking from the tradition that the nominated MLAs will be decided by the ruling party amongst independent people. In 2016, BJP did not win a single seat, but had three MLAs as nominated. This time also, three BJP people have been nominated. In alliance with the  NR Congress, BJP had won six MLAs and now has nine with this three nominated.  The NR Congress won 10 seats and the NR Congress-BJP government has been formed. 


In Puducherry this time 6 independent candidates have won. NR Congress-BJP coalition has assumed power amid much tug-of-war and hard bargainings with them.


Overcome Weaknesses


Party has been consistently getting a low vote share.  In these elections, CPI(M), CPI and VCK contested six seats each as partners of the DMK-led alliance. Our vote share was 0.85 per cent, lower than CPI’s 1.09 per cent and VCK’s 1.5 per cent. In the 2016 Assembly elections, Party contested as part of the six-party People’s Welfare Front.  We contested in 25 seats and polled the lowest amongst all the six alliance partners.  We got 0.71 per cent of vote share, while CPI got 0.79 per cent.  The six parties altogether polled 6.1 per cent. The state committee review points that: “Even in the constituencies where we have contested many times, our vote share has not been increasing.  This weakness needs to be properly analysed and overcome.  Unless our independent strength and mass following is increased in these seats, we cannot ensure victory in the future”.  This must be seriously examined and necessary political-organisational steps be taken. 


The weaknesses noted by the state committee review such as our choice of determining priority constituencies; combating parliamentary opportunism affecting the selection of candidates; lack of adopting proper procedures in the choice of candidates including youth, women and working class sections; delays in  strengthening our links with the people even in the decided priority constituencies till the final list of candidates is announced; preparatory work of checking the voters list, enrolling new voters, preparing the polling booth agents etc., must be corrected and necessary organizational steps be taken.


A proper review of the Party committees, branches and Party members in the election work must be conducted.  Regular branch meetings, taking up local issues, politicization of our ranks and strengthening capacity for influencing people must be undertaken urgently.


Assam


The BJP-led alliance has managed to retain the government for the second consecutive term securing 75 out of the 126 MLAs in the legislative assembly.


1,91,76,846 voters exercised their franchise out of the total number of voters which stands at  2,33,74,087 in the state. The polling was 82.04 per cent. The votes polled decreased by 2.63 per cent compared to the last Assembly elections held in 2016. There was no wave in favour of any political party in this election.


The main contest took place between the BJP-led alliance and the Congress-led ‘Mahajot’. The Bodoland Peoples Front (BPF) was with the BJP in 2016. The newly-formed UPPL was with the BJP in this election instead of the BPF. The BJP-led alliance secured 75 seats. Compared to the election held in 2016 the BJP and its allies lost 11 seats. The BJP got 60 seats (33.21 per cent), AGP got 9 seats (7.9 per cent) and the UPPL got 6 seats (3.4 per cent).


The Congress got 29 seats (29.67 per cent), the AIUDF got 16 seats (9.29 per cent), the BPF got 4 seats (3.39 per cent), the other parties of the ‘Mahajot’, namely CPI (0.14 per cent), CPI(ML) Liberation (0.14 per cent), Anchalik Gana Morcha (0.07 per cent) and the RJD could not win any seat. The CPI(M) contested two seats with seat adjustments with the ‘Mahajot’ and won the Sorbhog seat. Our Party polled 0.84 per cent of votes.


The BJP-led alliance secured 44.32 per cent votes as against the ‘Mahajot’s vote share of 43.54 per cent. The difference of vote share between them is only 0.78 per cent. The total votes secured by the BJP-led front is 85,56,059. The total votes secured by the `Mahajot’ and the CPI(M) is 83,96,486. The difference of votes between the two is only of 1,59,673 votes.


The Background


The BJP came to the power of Assam for the first time in 2016. The BJP has put forwarded a number of promises during the time of election in 2016. They gave the slogan of safeguarding the ‘Jati, Mati, Veti’ (Nation, Land) of Assam in 2016. But the BJP-led government had continuously carried forward the anti-people economic policies, politics of communal polarization, increased attacks on democracy during its last five year tenure. This had aggrieved the people of the state. Right from the beginning the  BJP led government resorted to communal politics and propaganda in almost all the important  issues creating a threat to peace, unity and integrity in the state.


In such a situation, the task of dethroning the BJP-led government became central task in the 2021 Assembly election and pave the way for a secular government in the state. But not a single political party had the strength to achieve this on its own. So, it became imperative for the Left and democratic parties to give a united fight so that BJP and its allies might be defeated. The AIUDF, the BPF, the CPI, the CPI (M-L) Liberation and the Anchalik Gana Morcha formed a ‘Mahajot’ under the leadership of Congress party. Later on RJD also joined the ‘Mahajot’. The electoral tactics were worked out on the basis of the discussion in the Party state committee.


The Reasons Behind BJP’s Win:


1. The main reason behind BJP’s coming back to power is the intense communal polarisation. During its last tenure the BJP successfully carried forward its rabid communal politics. It was successful in strengthening the organisation of RSS-BJP in Hindu inhabited areas. During the anti-CAA movement the pace of BJP-RSS’s communal politics faced some hurdles. But due to the first wave of Covid-19 pandemic the pace of anti-CAA movement weakened. BJP took full advantage of the pandemic situation. In the name of fighting spread of Covid-19, the BJP-led government strangled all the democratic norms and movements  and resorted to suppress agitations. In the early days of Covid-19 pandemic, the BJP-RSS and the Hindutva forces resorted to rabid communal campaign putting all the blame on Muslims as the sole conspirators for the spread of the virus. Even during the election campaign, BJP-RSS termed the election as ‘clash of civilisations’, ‘fight against the Mughals’, ‘fight between 65 per cent and 35 per cent’ etc. By such campaigns, the BJP-RSS could divide the people on communal lines. Due to their rabid communal slogans, communal polarisation was especially successful in constituencies where there are sizeable number of religious minority voters.


2. During  the last five years, the activities of various organisations led by the RSS and Sangh Parivar continuously increased in a planned manner. Through their activities they continuously mobilised people on communal lines and spread communal venom.


3. Just before the elections, the ruling party was able to form a large base of beneficiaries through various schemes like the ‘PM Kisan Samman Nidhi’, ‘Arunodaya’, ‘Jan-Dhan Yojna’, ‘Distribution of free scooty to girl students’, `Rs. 3000 in cash to the tea garden workers’. The BJP, through various schemes, could successfully increase its influence among the rural poor and the tea gardens. Likewise, the slogan of writing off all micro-finance loans attracted a large number of women into its fold. The BJP-led government distributed government money to temples, Namghars, Satras which also helped in increasing their influences.


4. By their continuous efforts for communal polarization, the BJP could successfully divert the people from issues concerning their lives and livelihood. The greater number of votes of various ethnic groups and nationalities belonging to Hindu communities went in favour of the BJP. This trend was strong amongst the linguistic minority community. 


5. The sheer strength of money power, abuse of government machinery was the hallmark of BJP’s electioneering. The role of the Election Commission was out and out biased and favoured the ruling party.


6. Most of the media, both print and electronic, propagated the BJP thus helping them in the election.


7. The BJP started preparations for Assembly elections very early. The party organised booth committees one year before and increased their organisational activities. They also organised meetings of the beneficiaries, in many constituencies just before the elections. The government laid many foundation stones to attract the voters.


Reasons for the Defeat of the ‘Mahajot’


1. To prevent the division of anti-BJP votes, the unity among the Left and democratic parties was neither complete nor satisfactory. The two newly formed anti-BJP regional parties the AJP and the RD participated in the elections separately. As a result, there was a division of votes. At the same time, this had a demoralising effect on many democratic and secular people. Just two months before polls, there prevailed an atmosphere of uncertainty as to whether the anti-BJP forces would be able to put up a united fight. This had an adverse impact on the people.


2. The role of the Congress party so far as uniting the anti-BJP political parties are concerned, is praiseworthy. But the internal contradictions among the state leadership, failure of a section of Congress party leadership to have a firm position against the Hindutva politics, failure to give adequate importance to the other political parties in the ‘Mahajot’ led to the overall failure of the Congress party to play its adequate role as the leading party of the anti-BJP coalition. Above all, the Congress party failed in regaining its influence lost five years ago.


3. The parties in the ‘Mahajot’ failed to fully challenge the lies spread by ruling BJP on issues of development. The general voters, under the propaganda of the BJP, seemed convinced that the state is on a path of development under the BJP rule and this will continue in the days to come.


4. In the last elections to the Bodoland Territorial Council, the UPPL wrested power from the BPF. As a result, the influence and strength of the BPF, a constituent of the ‘Mahajot’ this time, was decreased considerably. The BPF could win only in 4 constituencies. In 2016 BPF won 12 seats.


5. In 2016, due to vote division among the Congress and the AIUDF, BJP won as many as 12 seats in the state. This time, even after adjustments, the BJP could win in 6 of these assembly constituencies. This shows that there is weaknesses in transferring votes. There is a consolidation and division of votes on communal lines.


6. In five upper Assam districts, the BJP could win in as many as 10 constituencies due to the division in opposition votes. A sizeable vote share of anti-BJP fold went to the AJP. In certain pockets, the RD also played a spoiler. Moreover, during the campaign certain AIUDF leaders uttered irresponsible and communal remarks. This gave opportunities to the BJP to further its communal polarisation.


The CPI(M) and the Left


The CPI(M) contested in 2 seats. The CPI and the CPI(ML) contested 1 seat each. The CPI(ML) separately contested alone in the hill district of Karbi Anglong in 3 seats.


In the Sorbhog Constituency, our Party defeated the BJP by a margin of 10,662 votes. The CPI(M) candidate Manoranjan Talukdar polled 96,134 votes and captured the seat from the BJP. BJP got 85,472 votes. The CPI(M) got 50.7 per cent as against BJP’s 45.2 per cent of total polled votes.


In Rangia constituency, our Party got 64,426 votes whereas the BJP got 84,844 votes. The BJP won the Rangia constituency by a margin of 20,220 votes and the CPI(M) came second. In Rangia, the AJP and the RD polled 3560 and 3505 votes respectively. The CPI and the CPI(ML) (4 seats) could not win any seat. They polled 27,290 and 21,531 votes respectively.


The state committee of the Party had directed all the district committees to conduct independent campaign for Party's candidates and for the candidates of the ‘Mahajot’ as decided. The district committees are yet to submit their reports due to Covid-19 situation. Many district committees are yet to have their district committee meetings due to the prevailing pandemic situation. The reports available in the state Centre show that more or less all the district committees conducted campaigns as per Party guidelines. As per available reports there is no incident of violation of Party’s electoral tactics.


There was no representation for our Party in the Assembly in the last ten years. Electoral tactics were adopted so that we can have a representation in the Assembly and a secular government is formed. To prevent the division of anti-BJP votes, our Party joined hands with the ‘Mahajot’ and decided to contest a limited number of seats. The state committee of Party initially proposed to contest on 9 constituencies. A number of districts did not undertake any preparation before the issue of seat adjustments came to the agenda. At last, the state committee dropped 4 seats from the shortlisted constituencies. Finally, party took the position that in case of Sorbhog and Rangia constituency, Party will not compromise. Care was taken so that BJP could not break the opposition unity on the issue of seat adjustments.


Overall Conclusion


As noted at the outset, these results provide new opportunities for us to further strengthen people’s movements and struggles on burning issues.  The Party must actively work to strengthen our independent mass base and links with the working people by launching movements and struggles within the framework of the Covid protocol and restrictions in the coming period. 


From the issues of Covid mismanagement, Hindutva agenda of communal polarization, the farmers’ struggle, the Rafale deal corruption, the Pegasus spyware surveillance, large-scale privatization and loot of national assets, phenomenal price rise, increasing attacks on people’s livelihood, refusal to provide any substantive relief are some of the issues on which people’s struggles and intervention must be strengthened. Along with joint activities with the Left parties, efforts must be made to rally together secular opposition parties willing to come into joint actions and struggles. 





The Left Front’s vote share declined by 21.5% compared with 2016. In the 2019 Lok Sabha election, the Left front polled 7.4% of the vote, which fell to 5.6% in the recent Assembly elections.


The CC noted with dismay that though there has been a decline in the party’s mass base since 2008, the Left front has successfully organised big struggles, mobilising large numbers of people. The CC asked, “Brigade rallies with the participation of more than 10 lakh people were also organised. Yet the question remains [—] why such mobilisations and actions have not translated into better electoral results or reverse the trend of the decline in our mass base?”


The party has blamed this on a sharp Right-ward shift in West Bengal, where the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, it said, had expanded rapidly. The party also conceded that it had overestimated the anti-incumbency against the TMC.